Hey folks,
First off, just got a new (to me) Explorer 2, so be prepared for a lot of silly questions. Here we go..
I had a little bit of time to swing the Ex2 at a trashy old park. I decided to use IM backed all the way down to a clear screen as I like hearing everything, sensitivity at 15 auto (was able to keep a good threshold, with quick return from each target). I started off with conductive sounds, but it became a little irritating with the same tone whether the target was iron or conductive (on the horizontal axis). I kept having to look at the screen to see if the crosshairs were on the left side or the right side. I decided to switch over to ferrous sounds, and I liked it. I could tell by the pitch as to whether the target was iron or a possible goodie without having to look at the screen. I just ignored the low pitch "thunk thunk" ferrous tones. IF it was high pitched, I knew to check it out closer.
So my question - since I am VERY new to the Explorer (sure, I had an XS several years ago for a month but never really learned it), am I doing myself a disservice by learing the machine in Ferrous sounds rather than Conductive? Should I learn the more "basic" way by staying in smart rather than IM and using Conductive? Does it matter?
Thanks in advance. More questions to come.
w
First off, just got a new (to me) Explorer 2, so be prepared for a lot of silly questions. Here we go..
I had a little bit of time to swing the Ex2 at a trashy old park. I decided to use IM backed all the way down to a clear screen as I like hearing everything, sensitivity at 15 auto (was able to keep a good threshold, with quick return from each target). I started off with conductive sounds, but it became a little irritating with the same tone whether the target was iron or conductive (on the horizontal axis). I kept having to look at the screen to see if the crosshairs were on the left side or the right side. I decided to switch over to ferrous sounds, and I liked it. I could tell by the pitch as to whether the target was iron or a possible goodie without having to look at the screen. I just ignored the low pitch "thunk thunk" ferrous tones. IF it was high pitched, I knew to check it out closer.
So my question - since I am VERY new to the Explorer (sure, I had an XS several years ago for a month but never really learned it), am I doing myself a disservice by learing the machine in Ferrous sounds rather than Conductive? Should I learn the more "basic" way by staying in smart rather than IM and using Conductive? Does it matter?
Thanks in advance. More questions to come.
w