Ha! Don't we all wish

No, it won't do that. No more so than various other machines over the years that have experimented with various types of TID readouts. Like graphs (where you look at smears, peaks, etc...), etc.... At the time those came out, which seemed to be light-years ahead of the simple up/down conductivty scales, people have hoped that they could differentiate gold verses aluminum. But the minute you seem to find a place where gold rings most often hit, you go out out into a junky blighted park, and discover that an aweful lot of can slaw, wadded foil, bent beaver tails, etc... can read the same way too. You might be able to buck the odds and pass common recurring junk (ie.: like "ring enhancement programs"), but the day where we can truly know aluminum vs gold hasn't arrived yet
Yes, you could know for 100% certain,
IF all tabs and aluminum junk were consistent, and
IF all gold rings were consistent, but they are not. The only reason nickels can sometimes be cherry picked all day long, from amidst junk, is that 100% of USA nickels were and are always made exactly the same size and composition. Not so with aluminum and gold objects. They come in a never-ending size and shape assortment, and are both low conductors (depending on karot, size, etc...)