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First time out with the Minelab

Bob Szabo

New member
Well I got my feet wet today with a used Explorer XS I just picked up. I have to say Im really impressed.

I hunted a colonial site Ive been to a few times with another detector. This past Saturday with my other detector I was only able to find maybe 3 good targets, colonial flat buttons. I had a friend with me who cleaned up with his Minelab Explorer XS. He got a VA Half Cent 1783, 2 large cents, a nice seal used for marking the wax seal on a letter, at least a dozen colonial flat buttons, part of a riflemans buckle.... and the list goes on. We also had someone else with us and he was using another detector other than the Minelab and doing much better than I was but not as good as my friend with the Minelab. The other guy had an XS with him but cant use it anymore because of the weight. Thats where I lucked out. After seeing how good the Minelab was doing I bought it from him and took it out for about 3 hours today.

I went back to the same site today. This is an 1770s house that is loaded with iron. Iron everywhere! It is tough hunting. I found more with the XL the first time I used it than I did all day Saturday with a detector Im pretty used to. Finds wrer nothing to brag about but I still have a lot of learning to do and I did dig a lot of rusty nails. But I got a LOT of good targets. When I say good I mean non-ferrous. Im trying to dig everyting except iron here. The site also has turned up CW relics. Today I dug a few shotgun shells, some pull tabs, about 10 square nails, 3 colonial coin buttons, some misc. colonial brass items, a wheat cent and a large gold class ring. This isnt an impressive list I know BUT besides the nails its a lot of non-ferrous targets that I could not find with another detector. By the way, the class ring was lost in the 1980s by someone who worked on the farm, the farm owner is going to return it to the family. The gold ring is a lot less important to me than the good will it bought by giving it to the farm owner. I know there is still plenty of good colonial and CW stuff to be found there and Ill be going back.

Also... I spent some time in a plowed field. This soil here in Virginia can be real tough when its plowed. It tended to null out the detector but I still picked up a few targets.

Im impressed with this detector. I dont think Ill use it all the time though. If Im racing through the woods I think I can do better with my other detectors. For trashy sites, known camps, house sites or very mineralized ground Ill be taking the Explorer.
 
I love my Minelab. One reason you find more is because of the DD searchcoil. I really feel like I'm waisting my time looking with a mono coil.
 
All sounds good. A slow sweep speed gets you better finds and do overlap some. Keep the coil close to the ground and do not lift it up at the ends. use deep and set the gain and sensitivity higher until it starts to give false positives and then back off a bit. Listen for high tones that do not register as numbers or target hit and dig those for they are the deep silver coins. Sound is more accurate than numbers. Many many coins to not give traditional coin numbers so if you get a good tone but the numbers are off dig anyway. I usually dig anything with low first number and high second and a strong repeatable signal. Like 0 to 10 followed by 22 to 31. I dug a nice wheatie Saturday and it said 12 28 what it is supposed to say was 6 27. I have also dug memorial cents at 2 inches that said 21 29. So if you get a good tone dig. fill your holes even in the woods.
 
I didn't read all of the posts so if I'm repeating something, my apologies. Hunting the plowed fields can be both a nightmare and one of the biggest thrills of all. Any fields that have been farmed and turned for years will contain lots of trash but listen for large targets and dig them all, however do it carefully. Most all of my artillery shell finds were dug in plowed fields. Lots of 24 pound round balls with Bormann Time Fuses and Parrots. Occassionally a nice one with a brass Navy fuse. If you ever come across one with a fuse that reads "Tice", leave it alone and call someone with an EOD team. Good luck.
Jerry
 
I take it the ones marked Tice are percusion fuses.

Thanks for the replies! Ill be taking the Minelab out again this weekend.
 
[quote Bob Szabo]I take it the ones marked Tice are percusion fuses.

Thanks for the replies! Ill be taking the Minelab out again this weekend.[/quote]

I don't have my books handy and I'm no expert on this fuze but was always told to leave them alone. I've never found one. I think they were a special kind of concussion fuse that used a chemical that reacted on impact to detonate the shell. Supposedly they can still be extremely dangerous today. They were Union but I think the Confederates had a version of it too. Anyway, if you find one better to play it safe. Have a great weekend.
Jerry
 
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