My brother inlaw and I are considering buying Excals for wet sanding and water hunting. I've only used two water detectors for 7-10 years (both with very fast recovery), a CZ-20 (always in all metal) and an Aquasound (with modified Nautilus board), and also use an Explorer II for land. My brother inlaw is a newbie. Many of the guys in S Fl have done quite well over the years using the Excal but recently I was told by a couple of very experienced hunters that the Excal has a slow recovery and needs to be swung slowly to be effective. That's generally not much of an issue for water hunting but is a concern for wet sanding. Even if it's true that the Excal has a slow recovery does it really matter 99% of the time because of the sparsity of the targets? Wouldn't an Excal pick up a lone target just as deep no matter what speed the coil was swung if the target signature was strong enough even if the ID was incorrect, or would a slower swing actually produce a deeper target? Since target ID accuracy declines with target depth in nearly all if not all VLFs, how if any is the Excal different than other water detectors with a faster swing speed? Also, would being an experienced Explorer user help shorten the Excal learning curve? Any help would be appreciated.
