I thought had happened for me before...but now I'm sure of it...which I will get to later. Also found a nasty looking injun and a v-nickel. The 4 wheaties were 1909...1919...1925...and 1945.
The indian head was a 1905...not that it matters! The V-Nickel...my FIRST one with the SE...is a 1912. The Barber is an 1899 and was a TOUGH find...which I will get to shortly. I also found the Grover Cleveland presidential coin at about 9". Don't know what it's worth or how old it is...but it was fun to find. I thought for sure I had a silver quarter...but oh well.
Now to the 1899 Barber dime. I found it in the middle of a long dead null. Seriously...there was about a 20 foot section of this park that the SE just completely nulled at as there was iron everywhere. I have been really successful hunting after switching back to conductive sounds so I didn't want to switch back to All metal and get confused again. I was using the 10 x 14 excelerator coil and it separates nicely. Anyway...I just stood there in one spot and crept and I mean crept the coil along at about a 10 second per sweep speed and also dropped the sensitivity at this dead spot to 22 semi auto.... and sure enough...out pops an intermittemt high pitched flutey tone with the cursor dancing around top right to top center. I circled the hole and the sound would disappear...normally this is iron...but in two spots around the hole the sound was definately sweet...sweet enough for me to dig it. About 7 to 8" down at an angle...out pops the 1899 Barber dime.
Had it not been for the unmistakable tones I would not have dug because it did not give good tones all around the hole...only in two spots...but they were great sounding so I took a chance! It was laying at an angle...almost on it's edge and deep... and the 10 x 14 sniffed it out of a null. I now know I can find a coin directly in and over iron even in conductive sounds. I rechecked that spot with my cz70 and it was completely iron...and I mean every bit of it. I'll be going back for more sometime soon. I don't recommend hunting in a null and I feel it's best to avoid nulling as much as possible...but in extreme cases like this one...it did pay off for me. Normally I don't get much nulling hunting in semi auto...at least not long ones...but this was extreme trash!
The indian head was a 1905...not that it matters! The V-Nickel...my FIRST one with the SE...is a 1912. The Barber is an 1899 and was a TOUGH find...which I will get to shortly. I also found the Grover Cleveland presidential coin at about 9". Don't know what it's worth or how old it is...but it was fun to find. I thought for sure I had a silver quarter...but oh well.
Now to the 1899 Barber dime. I found it in the middle of a long dead null. Seriously...there was about a 20 foot section of this park that the SE just completely nulled at as there was iron everywhere. I have been really successful hunting after switching back to conductive sounds so I didn't want to switch back to All metal and get confused again. I was using the 10 x 14 excelerator coil and it separates nicely. Anyway...I just stood there in one spot and crept and I mean crept the coil along at about a 10 second per sweep speed and also dropped the sensitivity at this dead spot to 22 semi auto.... and sure enough...out pops an intermittemt high pitched flutey tone with the cursor dancing around top right to top center. I circled the hole and the sound would disappear...normally this is iron...but in two spots around the hole the sound was definately sweet...sweet enough for me to dig it. About 7 to 8" down at an angle...out pops the 1899 Barber dime.
Had it not been for the unmistakable tones I would not have dug because it did not give good tones all around the hole...only in two spots...but they were great sounding so I took a chance! It was laying at an angle...almost on it's edge and deep... and the 10 x 14 sniffed it out of a null. I now know I can find a coin directly in and over iron even in conductive sounds. I rechecked that spot with my cz70 and it was completely iron...and I mean every bit of it. I'll be going back for more sometime soon. I don't recommend hunting in a null and I feel it's best to avoid nulling as much as possible...but in extreme cases like this one...it did pay off for me. Normally I don't get much nulling hunting in semi auto...at least not long ones...but this was extreme trash!