Over the last 15 years I've tried half a dozen Fisher machines. And before I go on this is an attempt at a legitimate question not just a sarcastic statement.
The primary reason I tried to force feed myself a Fisher was because I could hip mount or chest mount most of them and I have a problem with rotator cuffs. The problem is iron. Every Fisher I've tried just loves iron. I search inland in Kentucky and surrounding areas for the most part. No beaches, and no sand. I dig so many false iron signals with any Fisher it ruins the experience. I've used the DFX and all the White predecessors, and have used the Explorer II for the past 3 years with a bungie harness to remove the weight. The harness solves the weight problem, and the detector get the deeper stuff with a minimum of false signals. Very little iron. It has drawbacks however such as target pinpoint, depth id, etc. Not so accurate, but deep, and accurate enough.
I can't help but be curious after reading the posts here about the F75. If there is anyone out there that can compare previous Fisher machines with the F75 -ONLY WITH REGARD TO IRON DESCRIMINATION? FAct is, if the F75 doesn't pick up iron bits like all previous Fishers I would love to try one out, but experience is the best teacher, and here in KY FIsher loves iron.
One last thing. I got the video from the rocket scientist that digs dime targets at 13 inches. Only in sandy soil will that be accomplished. Bring that thing here to KY and you will have to wait for the next 120 years to dig a dime at 13 inches. Not going to happen here. If the F75 can get a coin in Kentucky at measured 9 inches it will equal any other machine made.
I would really appreciate you Fisher guys reading my comments in the objective spirit in which they are intended. No bashing here, just real questions based on real experience.
The primary reason I tried to force feed myself a Fisher was because I could hip mount or chest mount most of them and I have a problem with rotator cuffs. The problem is iron. Every Fisher I've tried just loves iron. I search inland in Kentucky and surrounding areas for the most part. No beaches, and no sand. I dig so many false iron signals with any Fisher it ruins the experience. I've used the DFX and all the White predecessors, and have used the Explorer II for the past 3 years with a bungie harness to remove the weight. The harness solves the weight problem, and the detector get the deeper stuff with a minimum of false signals. Very little iron. It has drawbacks however such as target pinpoint, depth id, etc. Not so accurate, but deep, and accurate enough.
I can't help but be curious after reading the posts here about the F75. If there is anyone out there that can compare previous Fisher machines with the F75 -ONLY WITH REGARD TO IRON DESCRIMINATION? FAct is, if the F75 doesn't pick up iron bits like all previous Fishers I would love to try one out, but experience is the best teacher, and here in KY FIsher loves iron.
One last thing. I got the video from the rocket scientist that digs dime targets at 13 inches. Only in sandy soil will that be accomplished. Bring that thing here to KY and you will have to wait for the next 120 years to dig a dime at 13 inches. Not going to happen here. If the F75 can get a coin in Kentucky at measured 9 inches it will equal any other machine made.
I would really appreciate you Fisher guys reading my comments in the objective spirit in which they are intended. No bashing here, just real questions based on real experience.