sgoss66
Well-known member
The good? A quick, non-scientifically-performed air test has me shocked! Inside my house, detector sitting on a box, in disc. mode with the sens. and thresh. cranked up pretty good, I got over 14" on a quarter, around 13" on a nickel, and between 11" and 12" on a dime. Wow! VERY impressive, to me...
The bad? Took it out for a short hunt today to get the feel for it. It quickly became clear that it will take much, much more than one hunt to get the feel for it!! No surprise there, but I was NOT prepared for the "machine gun fire" I would hear in my ears on every sweep of the coil! I didn't even know where to start, in terms of adjustments. Totally different than the older BH machines I have gotten used to. Now, this WAS at a very trashy 100-year old park, and I really do think these tones were actual targets in the ground. I was able to calm it down just a bit by really jacking up the disc., lowering sens., and really lowering the thresh. (well into the negative values) -- but still...this seems to be one HOT machine! My brain was simply overloaded with all the info pouring into my head! I finally worked to concentrate REALLY hard on ignoring ALL but the better, repeatable, high-confidence-meter signals, just for the sake of learning; and doing this I was able to pick out some good targets. I took 2 quarters, and dime, and a pre-82 penny in about 20 minutes, from a place I hunted pretty hard with my prior BH machines. But, I was only able to hunt a VERY small area due to all the target hits I was hearing and trying to decipher all of it. Even in this small area I hunted, I KNOW I left alot there; I'm sure some of the higher-tone, less-repeatable, lower-confidence targets were likely either deeper, or masked, coins. I clearly see I'm gonna have to put in big-time hours on this thing, at a multitude of different sites, just to learn what's going on. A trashy park, in retrospect, was NOT the place to do a first-time hunt with such a hot, sensitive detector.
I am going to really like this thing, I can tell -- as soon as I learn the proper way to adjust the settings, and which settings to adjust in different scenarios; but MAN! After getting used to relatively infrequent tones on my BH machines, this half dozen to dozen, multiple-pitch tones/bouncy TIDs on EVERY swing is really tough. I will say, though, that all 4 coins were 3-6" deep, and on those, and even at 5-6", the TID was pretty stable once you got the coil over the middle of a good target (and the confidence meter confirmed things as well).
I have read a TON on how to use these detectors, but still am overwhelmed. Any info anyone can offer would be great.
Steve
The bad? Took it out for a short hunt today to get the feel for it. It quickly became clear that it will take much, much more than one hunt to get the feel for it!! No surprise there, but I was NOT prepared for the "machine gun fire" I would hear in my ears on every sweep of the coil! I didn't even know where to start, in terms of adjustments. Totally different than the older BH machines I have gotten used to. Now, this WAS at a very trashy 100-year old park, and I really do think these tones were actual targets in the ground. I was able to calm it down just a bit by really jacking up the disc., lowering sens., and really lowering the thresh. (well into the negative values) -- but still...this seems to be one HOT machine! My brain was simply overloaded with all the info pouring into my head! I finally worked to concentrate REALLY hard on ignoring ALL but the better, repeatable, high-confidence-meter signals, just for the sake of learning; and doing this I was able to pick out some good targets. I took 2 quarters, and dime, and a pre-82 penny in about 20 minutes, from a place I hunted pretty hard with my prior BH machines. But, I was only able to hunt a VERY small area due to all the target hits I was hearing and trying to decipher all of it. Even in this small area I hunted, I KNOW I left alot there; I'm sure some of the higher-tone, less-repeatable, lower-confidence targets were likely either deeper, or masked, coins. I clearly see I'm gonna have to put in big-time hours on this thing, at a multitude of different sites, just to learn what's going on. A trashy park, in retrospect, was NOT the place to do a first-time hunt with such a hot, sensitive detector.
I am going to really like this thing, I can tell -- as soon as I learn the proper way to adjust the settings, and which settings to adjust in different scenarios; but MAN! After getting used to relatively infrequent tones on my BH machines, this half dozen to dozen, multiple-pitch tones/bouncy TIDs on EVERY swing is really tough. I will say, though, that all 4 coins were 3-6" deep, and on those, and even at 5-6", the TID was pretty stable once you got the coil over the middle of a good target (and the confidence meter confirmed things as well).
I have read a TON on how to use these detectors, but still am overwhelmed. Any info anyone can offer would be great.
Steve