salmonriverhotrock
New member

We have been over a 100 degrees each day for a while but went out in the yard this morning to get a first feel for the F2. Around 4 years ago, I put together sort of a test patch but have not needed it or used it in a long time so kind of forgot the exact spot. I did however recall a Quarter was the last coin to the right of the outer row as I had faced putting it together.
My first coil to try out on the F2 is the 11" DD and it found and identified the Quarter running full sensitivity and no discrimination at 4" that is or about what I planted it. I moved on to another area of the yard listening to the various tones but got in an location that it just went bonkers. I lifted the coil up, turned down the sensitivity all the way and put it back down to the ground but it was still going crazy. After a bit and moving away, it was back to normal. I reset for full sensitivity and worked my way back to that location from another direction and it did it again, even raised in the air. I again reduced the sensitivity and moved away and all was back to normal.
I went to another location in the yard not far from that one and got a hit on what may be a copper penny at 4" and another that may be a Zinc at 4". I will explain in the next paragraph.
This evening, I took my BH Pioneer 505 with an 8" concentric coil through the same locations, sensitivity all the way up, no discrimination. It found and identified the Quarter at 4". I went over to the location the F2 went bonkers and it ran the area like normal, sounding on a few low tone targets. No chatter what so ever. I then went over to the two Penny (?) locations. Now my 505 only has 3 tones but, the display has a marked place for a Zinc and another for a copper 1 cent or Dime and gives a lower tone for a Zinc and a higher for a Copper or Dime. The F2 has 4 tones but only one display marked Zinc that is for both Zinc and Copper pennies. The F2 does however, give a lower tone for Zinc and a higher tone for a Copper under the same display mark. The bad part is, if you Notch out the Zinc on the F2, you notch out both Zinc and Copper. The BH 505 has them separated so if you want to hunt copper, you can Notch out Zinc. Anyhow, both machines are at least by Tones and depth, telling me the same thing and I have also checked the tones by open air testing. I just have not dug them up yet to confirm the targets because I want to play with this some more with an 8" concentric coil on the F2.
As for the F2 going bonkers, it ran just wonderful this evening in the heat over the same locations, 2 and 3 times. This is just my hunch and based on cold weather metal detecting. This morning, my F2 came out of a cooler environment than outside was. This evening, the F2 had been outside for a few hours in the shade. The BH Pioneer 505 however, came right outside from an air conditioned environment. Now I have run a very sensitive all metal Gold Detector in all kinds of weather and one thing it don't like is being made to operate while it is trying to acclimate. Until it equalizes, you are constantly re-setting it. I'm suspicious this may have been the culprit. Down here in the Salmon River canyon, we have NO cell phone signals at my location. There is buried power lines for the well, sprinkler system, and for the houses and I know I was very near the one that services the well but it did not repeat what happened this morning. It has been my understanding that the F2 is very sensitive and so it is my thought the problem was not EMI but the F2 was simply acclimating to the temperature change. If it was an issue of Iron and minerals, I would be extremely surprised as my experience with DD coils has been one in that they cut through higher iron content than a Concentric will with the same sensitivity applied. If this location was that bad for a DD coil, my BH Pioneer 505 at full power with a concentric coil should have went nuts chattering and I have had it do that in some places here in the canyon. On the issue of the F2 becoming unstable, interestingly, I have not seen one write up consider or suggest temperature adjustment. Most everything leans towards EMI as the culprit or defective coil and or machine. I can not picture BH or Fisher having the number of failures I seem to read about. First Texas is not a company full of armatures.
Just for play this morning, the F2 in the all metal Pin Point mode will detect Hot Rocks held in the air or placed on the ground. I tried the F2 out on all of my test Hot Rock collection, even a real small rascal. While in the normal mode of detecting, full or lowest sensitivity, no discrimination, it auto ground balances and does not respond to them at all on the ground. In the all metal Pin Point mode, the F2 will also hit on about a 1/2 lb. bag of river Black Sand (magnetite). In the normal mode of detecting, low or full sensitivity, no discrimination, it auto ground balances and will not respond at all to it on the ground. I tried this by having the coil in the air first before touching and holding the Pin Point and I did the same near the ground off to the side a bit from the bag. Just my opinion but the F2 may have potential for detecting Black Sand pockets but will never out do the White's GMT. I did try detecting a .22 lead bullet on the surface of the ground and I think if anyone is looking to try and find Gold Nuggets at about the same size or smaller than that bullet, you may be in for a real challenge with the 11" DD coil. My White's GM V/Sat will distinctly hit on a half Grain with it's smallest DD coil but for the F2 and the 11" DD, I would think your going to have to possibly be in the Gram sizes for a good repeatable Iron Tone. I did not do this with my BH 505 today because i already know it will hit on Hot Rocks and Black Sand. Some time ago, I also while doing air testing on the BH 505, saw what a coin behind a Hot Rock would detect like. I can not recall though if I tried this on the ground but it was amazing how it effected identity of the coins or missed them completely. Not all Hot Rocks are equal but I thought I determined that a Hot Rock can partly or completely mask a coin under it no matter how small the Hot Rock as the auto ground balance will balance it out.
What I also found this morning with the F2, there is a potential for it to want to Tone identify a Zinc and a Copper penny very near each other just on the surface of the ground, as a Zinc tone. I just could not get the F2 to over ride a Zinc Tone and distinctly Tone for a Copper. So if you get a good Zinc Tone but with a broken Copper tone very near (remember both fall under the Zinc display), you may want to go after the Zinc instead of leaving it and then re-check again for a Copper. This was using the 11" DD coil so the 8 and 4 inch concentric's could have much different results. I did forget to try this same set up with my BH Pioneer 505 this evening, sorry.
I only write this to share, it is by no means scientific in a controlled setting or cast in stone and is only a first run out of the box here in my yard. There is a long ways to go seeing what this F2 machine will do and like any others I have operated all my years, none cease to teach you something new.