Mike Hillis
Well-known member
I went detecting without an electronic pinpointer two weeks ago, and decided right there and then I didn't want to coin hunt anymore without a pinpointer. It is just too slow. Yes I can pinpoint with my detector, yes I am excellent at probing for coins, and yes I can eventually find my target in the hole or the plug but its just soooooo inefficient doing it without a pinpointer. I was really missing my Uniprobes.
I remember I still had my old Little Wizard II stashed somewhere that I used for several years, and I started hunting for it, when I remembered I had a new F-Point pinpointer laying around somewhere! I had got it with a detector purchase several years back. I don't even remember what detector it came with. I just remember putting a battery in it and turning it on, air testing it and putting it right back into the box as something to keep around for someone else.
So I found it, took it out of the box, re-installed the battery and air tested it with a dime. Got a hair less than a half inch in distance. I need at least 2". I'd read about people super-tuning Garrett ProPointers, so I tried it with the F-Point. That helped a little. but not much. Maybe another quarter inch.
Well, I figured there had to be a course adjustment pot in there somewhere that might help so I took the thing apart. Wasn't too difficult. You have to remove the battery rest by gently unseating the two tabs, pull the sensitivity dial off and un-screw the nut that holds it in place. Remove the buzzer first and let it hang out the end, and then push the pot stem down while tugging on the board. It all comes out in one piece. I was real cautious in taking it out so I wouldn't break the coil wires but guess what? There are no coil wires. It is just one pcb board. Neat layout.
Anyway, sure enough, there was a course adjustment pot. I re-connected the battery and fiddled with it trying different settings until I got something that seemed like an improvement. Got it up to a inch on dime and put it all back together. The only thing I had to be careful with when putting it back together was making sure I didn't pinch a wire when I was sliding the buzzer's collar back into it's slot.
After I got it put back together, I re-connected the battery and tried again. Better, but still not what I want. There is a little air gap inside. I dug through my treasure chest of rings looking for something that would work for super tuning and found a little silver, open ended, dolphin toe ring that was the right diameter and supertune with it and squeeze it into place. Was feeling pretty good then because I was getting 1-1/2 inches on a dime. But that shortly turned sour because it wouldn't hold the depth consistently. Air distance would fluctuate from test to test and require some ongoing adjustments. Still worth a try, though.
I'm going to take it with me next time out but I'm going to dig up my old Little Wizard II for a backup. Hope it still works. I haven't seen it in several years and it was full of dirt then.
I went looking for online reviews of pinpointers, but I'm not ready to spend $100+ bucks on one right now. The new F19 is on the horizon, the mythical Cazador is supposedly not a myth, and the Russians are capturing my attention with their Signum series. And I have that ongoing love affair with the V3i color display.
If you have any good suggestions for an inexpensive, reliable electronic pinpointer that can consistently give me 2" depth on a dime. I'm all ears.
HH
Mike
I remember I still had my old Little Wizard II stashed somewhere that I used for several years, and I started hunting for it, when I remembered I had a new F-Point pinpointer laying around somewhere! I had got it with a detector purchase several years back. I don't even remember what detector it came with. I just remember putting a battery in it and turning it on, air testing it and putting it right back into the box as something to keep around for someone else.
So I found it, took it out of the box, re-installed the battery and air tested it with a dime. Got a hair less than a half inch in distance. I need at least 2". I'd read about people super-tuning Garrett ProPointers, so I tried it with the F-Point. That helped a little. but not much. Maybe another quarter inch.
Well, I figured there had to be a course adjustment pot in there somewhere that might help so I took the thing apart. Wasn't too difficult. You have to remove the battery rest by gently unseating the two tabs, pull the sensitivity dial off and un-screw the nut that holds it in place. Remove the buzzer first and let it hang out the end, and then push the pot stem down while tugging on the board. It all comes out in one piece. I was real cautious in taking it out so I wouldn't break the coil wires but guess what? There are no coil wires. It is just one pcb board. Neat layout.
Anyway, sure enough, there was a course adjustment pot. I re-connected the battery and fiddled with it trying different settings until I got something that seemed like an improvement. Got it up to a inch on dime and put it all back together. The only thing I had to be careful with when putting it back together was making sure I didn't pinch a wire when I was sliding the buzzer's collar back into it's slot.
After I got it put back together, I re-connected the battery and tried again. Better, but still not what I want. There is a little air gap inside. I dug through my treasure chest of rings looking for something that would work for super tuning and found a little silver, open ended, dolphin toe ring that was the right diameter and supertune with it and squeeze it into place. Was feeling pretty good then because I was getting 1-1/2 inches on a dime. But that shortly turned sour because it wouldn't hold the depth consistently. Air distance would fluctuate from test to test and require some ongoing adjustments. Still worth a try, though.
I'm going to take it with me next time out but I'm going to dig up my old Little Wizard II for a backup. Hope it still works. I haven't seen it in several years and it was full of dirt then.
I went looking for online reviews of pinpointers, but I'm not ready to spend $100+ bucks on one right now. The new F19 is on the horizon, the mythical Cazador is supposedly not a myth, and the Russians are capturing my attention with their Signum series. And I have that ongoing love affair with the V3i color display.
If you have any good suggestions for an inexpensive, reliable electronic pinpointer that can consistently give me 2" depth on a dime. I'm all ears.
HH
Mike