I've had a chance to get out a few times for short hunts recently, and I've found a consistent way to ID nickels with my
DIGGER on the 705. In the last three hunts I've dug no less than 12 nickels, including two war nickels ('42 & '43), and they all came in the same way.
The secret is a combination of high/low tones and TID. I get a consistent high tone swinging left-to-right, and a consistent low tone when passing over the target right-to-left. Left-to-right (LtR) the TID jumps a bit between 38 & 42, followed by RtL TID's jumping all over in the low range from -2 to 18. I've completely circled the targets, and it makes no difference where around the target I am, it behaves the same. At first I thought it could be more than one object in the vicinity, but that was proven to not be the case at all. The key is the consistency of the one way high tones and TID followed by low tones/TIDs the other way. The exact range of the low tones and TIDs is unimportant.
I love digging nickels, and it bothered me that the Digger wasn't going to be a reliable nickel finder. But now that I know what to listen and look for, I'm even more thrilled with my
DIGGER! 

The secret is a combination of high/low tones and TID. I get a consistent high tone swinging left-to-right, and a consistent low tone when passing over the target right-to-left. Left-to-right (LtR) the TID jumps a bit between 38 & 42, followed by RtL TID's jumping all over in the low range from -2 to 18. I've completely circled the targets, and it makes no difference where around the target I am, it behaves the same. At first I thought it could be more than one object in the vicinity, but that was proven to not be the case at all. The key is the consistency of the one way high tones and TID followed by low tones/TIDs the other way. The exact range of the low tones and TIDs is unimportant.
I love digging nickels, and it bothered me that the Digger wasn't going to be a reliable nickel finder. But now that I know what to listen and look for, I'm even more thrilled with my

