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

Changed email? Forgot to update your account with new email address? Need assistance with something else?, click here to go to Find's Support Form and fill out the form.

HF Coil Program Needed For Relics

bayourebel2

Member
Anyone care to share settings for cw relics for the HF 9 inch coil on 4.1 with good depth. I need it for my upcoming trip to South Carolina.I have searched but cant really find what I am looking for.Thanks
 
martygene said:
i'd try CCTodd's relic program. just go to CTTODD.COM

That’s what I was thinking. Same program just run it in 28khz. Works very well. Good luck
 
Thanks will try it
 
But you'll have to change the tone break points.
 
I normally run full tones so is it possible to use full tones? Thanks
 
Yes it is. CT Todd's program and others, including many of mine, uses tone discrimination. That's a way to discriminate without losing depth. Straight discrimination will lose some depth. If you use CTT's program on any frequency other than the one he lists, the VDI's will change because he does not use normalization so your tone disc will be off target. You can use 28 khz with full tones but will have only the 6..5 disc that he uses. Actually that will work just fine once you get used to the tones. My searching program does just that because I learned that using full tones falses a little less than 5 tones, especially with a little negative disc (-2.5).

Hope that's not too confusing.
 
Top