dfmike
Well-known member
These finds are from 3 separate beach hunts. I got my very first gold ring. It's really tiny as you can see. It was just a bit over the iron range on the F19 at a solid and unwavering 48. If I had set the V-Break to eliminate foil completely, the ring would still be hiding in the sand. I was surprised to find a 1938 silver blue nose dime. That particular beach has been opened to the public for twenty years perhaps. It obviously comes from another time when it was private property. The rest is the usual recent coins including a 10 cents EIRE euro (Ireland), religious medallions, another pendant written "follow your heart" on it, a Juicy Couture heart which I though was gold initially but it's probably brass or gold plated nickel (a solid 56 on the F19 just like nickels). I found a few toy cars which I always find interesting (a Mustang 427, PT Cruiser and a stock car that had its windshield broken by my digger).
I wrote "lots of rubbish" in the subject title because that's the reality of trying to find gold amongst trash. You will find much more trash than if you cherry pick the high conductor targets such as silver and copper and discriminate the rest. I didn't take a picture of the trash but believe me there was a lot of it. This particular beach is littered with pull tabs, foil and old and new bottle caps.
I did include some of the tiny things the F19 really seems to like (lower left in the picture). Small stuff at depth. Small pins, washers, broken metal pieces, bits of foil, etc. The little washer was 4 inches deep. It's so tiny that my pin pointer could not sniff it out in the pile of sand it came from. This happens often with the F19 but it never happened with the F5. The pin pointer operates at a lower frequency and has trouble finding what the F19 can when it comes to really small targets. It's annoying at times but fortunately it doesn't happen often as most targets are bigger than that.
If anybody is interested my settings were gain at max, discrimination mode with volume at 10 (this uses what Fisher calls FeTone to completely eliminate ferrous sounds). V-Break was set at 45 to eliminate the smaller foil targets. No notching or notch width was used. I used the 11 DD coil.
I wrote "lots of rubbish" in the subject title because that's the reality of trying to find gold amongst trash. You will find much more trash than if you cherry pick the high conductor targets such as silver and copper and discriminate the rest. I didn't take a picture of the trash but believe me there was a lot of it. This particular beach is littered with pull tabs, foil and old and new bottle caps.
I did include some of the tiny things the F19 really seems to like (lower left in the picture). Small stuff at depth. Small pins, washers, broken metal pieces, bits of foil, etc. The little washer was 4 inches deep. It's so tiny that my pin pointer could not sniff it out in the pile of sand it came from. This happens often with the F19 but it never happened with the F5. The pin pointer operates at a lower frequency and has trouble finding what the F19 can when it comes to really small targets. It's annoying at times but fortunately it doesn't happen often as most targets are bigger than that.
If anybody is interested my settings were gain at max, discrimination mode with volume at 10 (this uses what Fisher calls FeTone to completely eliminate ferrous sounds). V-Break was set at 45 to eliminate the smaller foil targets. No notching or notch width was used. I used the 11 DD coil.