dfmike
Well-known member
I'm a big F5 fan as you know. I sold my F44 and used the money towards an F19 that I got for a good price. I wanted to try a detector operating at a different freq for some time. Something that would possibly allow me to hunt in trashier places or highly mineralized ground more effectively and I was also looking for a few features I had on my F44 like back light and iron audio. The fact that the F19 uses the same coils as the F5 was also a big factor in my decision to get one.
The menu system is easy to understand and straightforward. The display is clean and well organized. It's not quite as informative as the F5 nor is it as easy to read at arms length. The back light works exactly like the F44 but the iron audio that they call FeTone works much better and is a feature I immediately appreciated. Basically it allows the detector to run the discrimination mode at zero and literally kills the sound of all iron targets which is the equivalent of 0-40 on the F19 scale. Normally one would notch iron but then depth starts to suffer. Here Iron is not notched, the detector detects it silently if you will. No fatigue, maximum depth (save for all metal of course).
So far I didn't have much time to test it outdoors. About 15 minutes on the front lawn. I found 3 shallow copper pennies and an old Hot Wheel car that was about 7 inches deep. That was in discrim mode at zero, gain at max, no v break, no notch. The detector came with the Fisher 11 DD coil and it's the only one I used so far. I want to test the concentric coil on it even though I know the F19 is not designed to use one. In air tests I was surprised to notice that with the same targets that I tested my F44, F5 and Omega 8000, it gave me the same depth give or take 0.5 inches in all metal with threshold at zero. That's on a copper penny, silver dime, silver quarter, silver ring. It trumped the F5 on a 2 dollar Canadian coin by 2 inches. It's the lowest conductivity target of the bunch so that could explain it. I tested the 11 DD coil of the F5 on it just to see if it would perform exactly the same and it did. The F5 coil's epoxy around the base is thick and doesn't let the plastic seams show through. The one on the F19 almost seems transparent or much thinner. It's possible the F19's coil is an older model and Fisher updated the way they seal their coils.
Bill (Dirtfishing) on youtube seems to get slightly higher numbers than I do in his air tests of this machine especially on the nickel where he gets 15 inches in all metal.
I'm looking forward to trying it out where it counts... on the ground.
The menu system is easy to understand and straightforward. The display is clean and well organized. It's not quite as informative as the F5 nor is it as easy to read at arms length. The back light works exactly like the F44 but the iron audio that they call FeTone works much better and is a feature I immediately appreciated. Basically it allows the detector to run the discrimination mode at zero and literally kills the sound of all iron targets which is the equivalent of 0-40 on the F19 scale. Normally one would notch iron but then depth starts to suffer. Here Iron is not notched, the detector detects it silently if you will. No fatigue, maximum depth (save for all metal of course).
So far I didn't have much time to test it outdoors. About 15 minutes on the front lawn. I found 3 shallow copper pennies and an old Hot Wheel car that was about 7 inches deep. That was in discrim mode at zero, gain at max, no v break, no notch. The detector came with the Fisher 11 DD coil and it's the only one I used so far. I want to test the concentric coil on it even though I know the F19 is not designed to use one. In air tests I was surprised to notice that with the same targets that I tested my F44, F5 and Omega 8000, it gave me the same depth give or take 0.5 inches in all metal with threshold at zero. That's on a copper penny, silver dime, silver quarter, silver ring. It trumped the F5 on a 2 dollar Canadian coin by 2 inches. It's the lowest conductivity target of the bunch so that could explain it. I tested the 11 DD coil of the F5 on it just to see if it would perform exactly the same and it did. The F5 coil's epoxy around the base is thick and doesn't let the plastic seams show through. The one on the F19 almost seems transparent or much thinner. It's possible the F19's coil is an older model and Fisher updated the way they seal their coils.
Bill (Dirtfishing) on youtube seems to get slightly higher numbers than I do in his air tests of this machine especially on the nickel where he gets 15 inches in all metal.
I'm looking forward to trying it out where it counts... on the ground.