Critterhunter
New member
As I and some others have said in the past, it seems the higher you ride sensitive the slower the machine wants you to sweep for best depth, or at the very least to keep the threshold from dropping out. This is also true in very high mineralized ground, even if you aren't riding a high sensitivity setting. By the same logic, it seems like if I lower sensitivity to say past 12 noon then the machine wants a somewhat faster sweep for hardest initial hit on a deep target. However, I know there is debate on this so I'm not convinced myself yet one way or another.
This is the advice I've most often heard from some of the vets on here...Something like go slow. And when you think you're going slow enough cut that speed in half and see if things get even better. All Minelabs want you to crawl, and that means 4 seconds per sweep or longer according to the experts in several Minelab forums for maximum depth and unmasking ability.
However, at super slow speeds I think you may not get as hard of an initial hit on a super deep target, but the threshold will softly change to a new pitch. Then it's time to pick up your sweep a bit and see what it is. Especially by doing short wiggles or super short constant sweeps over the target to bring out the best audio and tone ID. But, as said, when you crawl at a SUPER slow rate the initial hit I think might not be as "hard" as a somewhat faster sweep over it. By my experience going super slow I'll sometimes only get a slight threshold change to a new tone (like say a high tone if I just passed a deep coin), so I watch for any tone changes at all in the threshold's sound and then stop, wiggle, and listen.
Anyway, what is everybody's opinion on this? In your experience when SUPER crawling along do any of you guys think you don't really get a good hit on a real super deep target, but rather just notice a threshold change and only get a hard hit when you pick up your sweep over it to something faster, or at the very least of course when you wiggle or short sweep quick to pull the ID out of it? I'm more curious about that initial "hit" at super slow speed. Do you find it isn't as hard, or is only a tone change, and do you think that a somewhat faster sweep will give a better initial hit on it? After all, we all know by wiggling or short sweeping we pull the best hit/ID/audio out of super deep stuff, so why not using a somewhat faster (not saying fast, just less super slow) general hunting speed to find those real deep ones? I go back and fourth on this, because I've found I seem to get a harder hit on super deep stuff doing a general long hunting sweep if I pick up the speed a bit compared to super slow. Now, the interesting question is, even if that is true, does that mean you are getting DEEPER at that a bit faster sweep, or are you only hitting the target harder? In other words, do you thing a super slow crawl might not hit as hard, or only make a threshold tone change, but in fact it's seeing deeper targets that way then a somewhat faster (but not fast) sweep...And then of course a wiggle/short sweep will of course hit hardest and pull the proper ID and tone out of it, but that's not what I'm asking here. It's the general hunting sweep. SUPER slow crawl and even though the tone only changes in the threshold it's reaching deeper? Or somewhat a bit faster sweep with a harder initial hit is getting deeper?
Please share your experiences on this, as I'm sure many want to know what speed general sweeping should be to notice the super deep stuff the deepest.
This is the advice I've most often heard from some of the vets on here...Something like go slow. And when you think you're going slow enough cut that speed in half and see if things get even better. All Minelabs want you to crawl, and that means 4 seconds per sweep or longer according to the experts in several Minelab forums for maximum depth and unmasking ability.
However, at super slow speeds I think you may not get as hard of an initial hit on a super deep target, but the threshold will softly change to a new pitch. Then it's time to pick up your sweep a bit and see what it is. Especially by doing short wiggles or super short constant sweeps over the target to bring out the best audio and tone ID. But, as said, when you crawl at a SUPER slow rate the initial hit I think might not be as "hard" as a somewhat faster sweep over it. By my experience going super slow I'll sometimes only get a slight threshold change to a new tone (like say a high tone if I just passed a deep coin), so I watch for any tone changes at all in the threshold's sound and then stop, wiggle, and listen.
Anyway, what is everybody's opinion on this? In your experience when SUPER crawling along do any of you guys think you don't really get a good hit on a real super deep target, but rather just notice a threshold change and only get a hard hit when you pick up your sweep over it to something faster, or at the very least of course when you wiggle or short sweep quick to pull the ID out of it? I'm more curious about that initial "hit" at super slow speed. Do you find it isn't as hard, or is only a tone change, and do you think that a somewhat faster sweep will give a better initial hit on it? After all, we all know by wiggling or short sweeping we pull the best hit/ID/audio out of super deep stuff, so why not using a somewhat faster (not saying fast, just less super slow) general hunting speed to find those real deep ones? I go back and fourth on this, because I've found I seem to get a harder hit on super deep stuff doing a general long hunting sweep if I pick up the speed a bit compared to super slow. Now, the interesting question is, even if that is true, does that mean you are getting DEEPER at that a bit faster sweep, or are you only hitting the target harder? In other words, do you thing a super slow crawl might not hit as hard, or only make a threshold tone change, but in fact it's seeing deeper targets that way then a somewhat faster (but not fast) sweep...And then of course a wiggle/short sweep will of course hit hardest and pull the proper ID and tone out of it, but that's not what I'm asking here. It's the general hunting sweep. SUPER slow crawl and even though the tone only changes in the threshold it's reaching deeper? Or somewhat a bit faster sweep with a harder initial hit is getting deeper?
Please share your experiences on this, as I'm sure many want to know what speed general sweeping should be to notice the super deep stuff the deepest.