Uncle Willy
New member
Been 105 degrees here for the past two or three days so I didn't get out. Today it was only about 100 and I needed a fix so drove to a nearby park, parked in the shade and hunted in the shade of four small trees next to the street. Didn't expect to find much and I didn't right away but I wasn't about to get out in that blistering sun so I went into my methodical, analytical mode and started searching every inch of ground under thiose trees and coins began to appear and I wound up with this little pile - a little over three bucks I think. Most of these coins have been in the ground a long spell..
Now for a tip if you don't already know. I keep forgetting to post these, then I run into a situation while hunting and remember. If you come across a big wide signal and you can't separate anything no matter which angle you attack it from - don't dismiss it as junk, a big can, rust pocket, or trash of some kind. Many times it is shallow, multiple coins at he same depth that all fall into the signal cone together and look like one big hunk of metal to the detector and read and sound as one big, wide, signal.
Center the target in pinpoint like any other target then probe ( don't dig a big hole ) until you locate the first coin. Remove that coin and if the signal still reads the same repeat the procedure until you can achieve target separation and nail the rest of the coins. Today I got a signal like that and had I dismissed it as junk I would have left a quarter, dime, nickel, and penny behind for some savvy beeper swinger to find. The other day I found four quarters in one hole that read as one big signal.over a wide area.
Bill.
Now for a tip if you don't already know. I keep forgetting to post these, then I run into a situation while hunting and remember. If you come across a big wide signal and you can't separate anything no matter which angle you attack it from - don't dismiss it as junk, a big can, rust pocket, or trash of some kind. Many times it is shallow, multiple coins at he same depth that all fall into the signal cone together and look like one big hunk of metal to the detector and read and sound as one big, wide, signal.
Center the target in pinpoint like any other target then probe ( don't dig a big hole ) until you locate the first coin. Remove that coin and if the signal still reads the same repeat the procedure until you can achieve target separation and nail the rest of the coins. Today I got a signal like that and had I dismissed it as junk I would have left a quarter, dime, nickel, and penny behind for some savvy beeper swinger to find. The other day I found four quarters in one hole that read as one big signal.over a wide area.
Bill.