I guess I should have been more specific and stated my position this way; that no ML user has admitted another PI can beat the ML under the right circumstances. Instead, all I heard was one excuse after another. I found that to be truly sad.
The truth is, the tests done by Bearkat displays the ATX can beat the ML under the right conditions. Such conditions my be limited, but that isn't the issue. Overall, I think Bearkat would agree, in the right hands, the ML would beat the ATX most of the time with the right settings. Again, that isn't the issue. What I think Bearkat is trying to display is the ATX is no slouch of a detector and in the hands of someone who is not an expert might do as well with an ATX as a novice using a ML who is not familiar with all the possible settings. Would you agree?
Now, do you, Chris, and/or J. Porter agree in the tests provided, the ATX did better than the ML at least on part of the test under the right condtions?
As for mineralization, I can't agree that just because the VLF can find the gold, the ground is not heavily mineralized. VLF's suffer when the ground has excessive magnetite and/or lots of rocks containing magnetite. This magnetite is something a good PI will basically ignore in many if not most cases. Any magnetite rock or magnitie ladened sand can easily mask a large nugget on a VLF if not set properly, but not on a PI. So, for a VLF, ground that has concentrations of magnetite in any form would be considered heavily mineralized in my opinion.
On the other hand, PI's suffer when the ground has high viscosity ground mineralization, which is usually caused by maghemite. PI's will have a tendency to be constantly giving odd signals from the maghemite causing frustration. Such ground is often a heavily clay based material which also causes problems and depth loss on both types of detectors.
One more note and that is your assumption the ground isn't heavily mineralized and that might be why the ATX appears to work better. So, if the ML was not able to find certain nuggets under what you assume to be "low mineralized conditions" are you saying it will do better in really bad ground? In other words, I hope you, Chris, or J. Porter are not stating that if the ground was worse, the ML would then detect those same nuggets at the same depth and do better on the ones where it displayed no or poor response. In my opinion, that will never happen and my opinion is based upon studying all PI's from a technical standpoint for the last 14 plus years.
Reg
PS: Just for the record, i am not a great Garrett fan, nor am I a dealer of any detector. As a person who field tested metal detectors for many years I am the type of person who wrote about any and all advantages and limitations of any detector so people are provided the most unbiased information I can give. I also respect those who do the same.