I will preface this post by stating I started metal detecting in 1978 at the age of 10. A sears branded Whites Coinmaster was my Christmas present for working on the farm for the year. That opened up a new world to me and have had many good detectors over the years.
My last purchase was a Minelab Etrac in 2010 after going through Colon cancer treatments. It has been an unbelievable performer over the years and I truly felt it could not be topped. Just no way could I meld with another detector that would give me as much information tonally, visually(ferrous/conductive numbers+discrimination screen) as well as the customization it offered. I even intimated this on this forum.
Unbeknownst to me my wife saw me handling a Manticore at a box store and purchased it for me as an early Father’s Day gift. I kindly and with trepidation asked her if she could return it and let me order it through a dealer. Thankfully she agreed when I explained the importance of supporting businesses tailored to our great hobby.
I made a call to BART at Big Boys Hobbies and explained my type of MDing. Old farming homesteads loaded to the hilt with iron and that I was apprehensive the Manticore could stack up to my Etrac. He chuckled and politely explained the features and that I would be blown away by the advances it offered over the older tech I was using. With some apprehension and not completely believing him I placed the order adding the 9” searchcoil hoping it would live up to the 8”x6” SEF on my etrac. Bart assured me it would.
I just spent my first 1 1/2hrs with the Manticore in my yard that was homesteaded in the late 1800’s by my grandparents. I have detected this yard with every metal detector I have owned since 1978. Pounded it is an understatement. I have not pulled a coin from it since the first couple years with the Etrac running every program conceivable.
The first find with the Manticore was a copper rivet still connected to leather from a horse harness. Encouraging since nonferrous targets dried up years ago. Second target part of a copper broach with the stone missing. Again very encouraging. It was a solid signal mixed with iron grunts.
Then I was gobsmacked when I got a solid repeating signal in an area loaded with coke and iron that was a dump for the old coal stove. At 6” out popped an 1888 IHC. I pulled three pieces of iron out of the spoil pile before I located it. I was dumbfounded. I could not believe what in the hell was occurring. In areas of iron I then pulled out 1916D and 1919 wheat penny’s. I pulled iron out of the spoil pile with the 1916D and the 1919 was only a one way repeater amidst iron grunts at 10”.
I still can’t believe what I just experienced. My settings:
All Terrain General
Long Noise Cancel @-6
Ground Balance 0
Recovery Speed 3
Upper Ferrous Limit 8
Lower Ferrous Limit 4
Ferrous Volume 4
Ferrous Pitch 1
Stabilizer 4
Stabilizer Filter Off
1 Region All Tones
Audio Theme Normal
Threshold Level 10
Threshold Pitch 1
Profile Medium
Frequency MultiIQ
Ferrous Indication On
I hunted with stock All Terrain General disc pattern and when at least a solid one way tone was heard I pressed the horseshoe for all metal to check for a repeatable signal in the iron grunts and looking for a repeatable black TID number amidst the red iron indicated TID’s. The wiggle method worked great for pinpointing with the 9” coil. The detector ran amazingly stable. I synced with it immediately. I expected a LONG learning curve. First pic is coins. The second pic is coins with nonferrous items at top and ferrous trash to the right I pulled out of the holes with the coins. Sorry for the long winded post but I AM BLOWN AWAY!!!
A special shout out to Bart @Big Boys Hobbies and to all you on this board. Bart and all of you were right and I was wrong. I am happy about that. I now have many, many sites I had previously written off to revisit. I feel like that 10 year old boy strapping his metal detector to his bicycle for the first time.
My last purchase was a Minelab Etrac in 2010 after going through Colon cancer treatments. It has been an unbelievable performer over the years and I truly felt it could not be topped. Just no way could I meld with another detector that would give me as much information tonally, visually(ferrous/conductive numbers+discrimination screen) as well as the customization it offered. I even intimated this on this forum.
Unbeknownst to me my wife saw me handling a Manticore at a box store and purchased it for me as an early Father’s Day gift. I kindly and with trepidation asked her if she could return it and let me order it through a dealer. Thankfully she agreed when I explained the importance of supporting businesses tailored to our great hobby.
I made a call to BART at Big Boys Hobbies and explained my type of MDing. Old farming homesteads loaded to the hilt with iron and that I was apprehensive the Manticore could stack up to my Etrac. He chuckled and politely explained the features and that I would be blown away by the advances it offered over the older tech I was using. With some apprehension and not completely believing him I placed the order adding the 9” searchcoil hoping it would live up to the 8”x6” SEF on my etrac. Bart assured me it would.
I just spent my first 1 1/2hrs with the Manticore in my yard that was homesteaded in the late 1800’s by my grandparents. I have detected this yard with every metal detector I have owned since 1978. Pounded it is an understatement. I have not pulled a coin from it since the first couple years with the Etrac running every program conceivable.
The first find with the Manticore was a copper rivet still connected to leather from a horse harness. Encouraging since nonferrous targets dried up years ago. Second target part of a copper broach with the stone missing. Again very encouraging. It was a solid signal mixed with iron grunts.
Then I was gobsmacked when I got a solid repeating signal in an area loaded with coke and iron that was a dump for the old coal stove. At 6” out popped an 1888 IHC. I pulled three pieces of iron out of the spoil pile before I located it. I was dumbfounded. I could not believe what in the hell was occurring. In areas of iron I then pulled out 1916D and 1919 wheat penny’s. I pulled iron out of the spoil pile with the 1916D and the 1919 was only a one way repeater amidst iron grunts at 10”.
I still can’t believe what I just experienced. My settings:
All Terrain General
Long Noise Cancel @-6
Ground Balance 0
Recovery Speed 3
Upper Ferrous Limit 8
Lower Ferrous Limit 4
Ferrous Volume 4
Ferrous Pitch 1
Stabilizer 4
Stabilizer Filter Off
1 Region All Tones
Audio Theme Normal
Threshold Level 10
Threshold Pitch 1
Profile Medium
Frequency MultiIQ
Ferrous Indication On
I hunted with stock All Terrain General disc pattern and when at least a solid one way tone was heard I pressed the horseshoe for all metal to check for a repeatable signal in the iron grunts and looking for a repeatable black TID number amidst the red iron indicated TID’s. The wiggle method worked great for pinpointing with the 9” coil. The detector ran amazingly stable. I synced with it immediately. I expected a LONG learning curve. First pic is coins. The second pic is coins with nonferrous items at top and ferrous trash to the right I pulled out of the holes with the coins. Sorry for the long winded post but I AM BLOWN AWAY!!!
A special shout out to Bart @Big Boys Hobbies and to all you on this board. Bart and all of you were right and I was wrong. I am happy about that. I now have many, many sites I had previously written off to revisit. I feel like that 10 year old boy strapping his metal detector to his bicycle for the first time.