Find's Treasure Forums

Welcome to Find's Treasure Forums, Guests!

You are viewing this forums as a guest which limits you to read only status.

Only registered members may post stories, questions, classifieds, reply to other posts, contact other members using built in messaging and use many other features found on these forums.

Why not register and join us today? It's free! (We don't share your email addresses with anyone.) We keep email addresses of our users to protect them and others from bad people posting things they shouldn't.

Click here to register!



Need Support Help?

Cannot log in?, click here to have new password emailed to you

Geographic parts of the USA w/no Explorers?

Tom_in_CA

Active member
A friend and I were musing over whether there are still parts of the USA (like certain states, areas, etc...) where the Explorer hasn't caught on yet. Since the Explorer, in general, is still fairly new in the USA, and only still catching on in some zones, it stands to reason that some states are still primarily Whites, Garretts, Tesoros, or whatever.

7 or so years ago here in CA, you never saw an Explorer in the old park turf. But once the secret got out, they sold like wild-fire. Now when you go to a group hunt, most are swinging Explorers. The first experienced guys to use them in a "non-Explorerized" park, invariably got some deeper missed silver, and word spread.

This was true of the Portland/Vancouver area, where a friend tells that a newbie walked into the club meeting with silver, he claimed to have found in such & such park. Some of the veterans doubted him, because this park had been so hammered by their XLTs and such. But one guy got curious, and agreed to meet the newbie at the park. After about the 5th signal comparison, the XLT guy, trying every which setting, had to admit that the Explorer simply sang them out better (deep silver) than his XLT. He broke down and forced himself to learn the tooty flooty sounds. For the next year, he had a field day going to all the "worked out" parks and getting silver that had been missed.

A friend of mine is in parts of Iowa and Nebraska right now, on a family reunion trip, He's simply amazed at the barbers and IHs that are popping up in the parks. Oddly, mostly teens and earlier, as if the top 4 or 5" has been worked by other machines. He bumped into an Explorer guy in this town, who said he is the first, to his knowledge, in the area, with an Explorer. But he had no probe, and had his settings all screwed up (tried to black out the screen and then edit back in exact coin coordinates on the grid, etc...). No doubt, w/my friends tutoring, that guy will soon be harvesting the same type results, and word will spread there.

The reason I bring this up, is I wonder if there's areas of the USA, that, still to this day, don't have high Explorer sales, use, etc... If no proficient Explorer users have hit some older geographic areas, it stands to reason that they'd be worth a trip to dedicate a week to touring the parks, eh?

Are there any grand old parks of the eastern state not getting worked by Explorers? Upper midwest? NE? etc...
 
Thats a interesting post , when you say the guy "screwed his settings up" by using a learned coin pattern i have to disagree on that. On sites that have low to moderate trash levels then the learn feature works a fantastic by saving alot of time digging rubbish. This feature is something i have not used a lot in the past but after recently blacking out the whole screen and learn accepting a few specific coins i was surprised as it works a treat. It works with amazing accuracy . It makes it fun too because you know when you get a clean hit then the target will probably be one of the coins you programmed the detector to locate.. It can pull out alot of coins in this mode on some sites that don't have masses of trash. . On trashy sites target masking makes this feature useless though as coins get nulled out along with the rejected trash.
 
Thanx Doctorcoinz. The way my friend described it, is the fellow would make note of where, for example, pennies, dimes, quarters, nickels, etc... fell on the left/right up/down axis. Then he'd edit in just a little square in those zones. Yes, would work for coins that are not too deep, but we all now that fringe deepies bounce around a bit, and are harder to lock on. Better to go by sounds in that case. So I would have to disagree with you on this, when it comes to chasing whispers. If the cursor failed to bounce in your confined box, you'd pass it as junk.
 
Doctorcoinz,

Depth and soil mineralization will also cause coins to not hit where they should, and trash is almost everywhere. Unless you are happy with clad hunting, you should never use a learned in pattern.

Chris
 
Tom,

I'm sure those places still exist. I've been lucky enough to stumble onto a few parks that hadn't been "explored". Judging from the posts on this forum seems that there are very few reports from some parts of the US. Of course that could just mean that no one is posting.

Chris
 
I know parts of PA are not "explored". I've gone to several parks and found nice silver easily and found multiple old farmhouses that seem to have never been touched. Maybe it's luck or research or a combination, but in my short detecting career i'm happy to report i've had some very good success with the Explorer. I hope the Whites guys keep using their favorite XLT or DFX. Leaves plenty of work for me :bouncy:
 
Top