A
Anonymous
Guest
Recently, on the Nuggetshooter Forum, there has been some discussion about gold nuggets that are invisible to PI type detectors, but give a good response on VLF types. I got involved in this discussion and one of the forum participants, John Blennert, was kind enough to send both myself and Reg Sniff, a couple of nuggets each to test. These are not tiny specks of gold, but of the size that you would expect a reasonable detection range from.
Examination of the nuggets shows a very platey/spongey structure, which is not very good for supporting eddy currents. Due to the thinness of the contact points between the plates, and the very small size of the plates themselves, the internal resistance of the total nugget must be quite high. This would result in the eddy currents having a very fast decay, due to the resistance losses. In the first picture, John's two nuggets are on the left, and my solid 0.9gm nugget on the right.
To determine how fast the eddy current decay is, I dusted off my ultra fast PI circuit board. This was a prototype for a detector that would find broken off needle tips in textiles and garments. With a suitable coil, the sample delay can be set as short as 1uS after the TX switch off. The normal coil on this unit is wound on a ferrite pot core half of nearly 3in in diameter. Placing the nugget on the centre pole of this core generates a strong enough signal to observe the decay curve all the way from its maximum value, right down into the noise level. Both of John B
Examination of the nuggets shows a very platey/spongey structure, which is not very good for supporting eddy currents. Due to the thinness of the contact points between the plates, and the very small size of the plates themselves, the internal resistance of the total nugget must be quite high. This would result in the eddy currents having a very fast decay, due to the resistance losses. In the first picture, John's two nuggets are on the left, and my solid 0.9gm nugget on the right.
To determine how fast the eddy current decay is, I dusted off my ultra fast PI circuit board. This was a prototype for a detector that would find broken off needle tips in textiles and garments. With a suitable coil, the sample delay can be set as short as 1uS after the TX switch off. The normal coil on this unit is wound on a ferrite pot core half of nearly 3in in diameter. Placing the nugget on the centre pole of this core generates a strong enough signal to observe the decay curve all the way from its maximum value, right down into the noise level. Both of John B