Andy Sabisch
Active member
This past weekend I did some driving around to a few sites that I had hit before and thought were pretty well cleaned out. One was where a few houses had stood that dated back to the 1890's. They had been bulldozed which made it a real chore to hunt between all the trash present.
I have been using a pattern locally that has worked well for me . . . . . I've attached a copy if anyone wants to experiment with it. If anyone wants an explanation as to what each rejected section is for, let me know . . . . there is actually method to my madness as they say.
This time I went back with the 6 inch Excelerator coil hoping to pull a few more targets out of the site. Well, I was a bit surprised at the results but about 1.5 hours turned up some clad, some trash, 5 Wheat cents ranging from 1917 to 1946 along with the 3 nice silver's in the photo.
(No, that is not a nick on the 1902 Barber . . . . it's only an optical illusion . . . at least that's my story and I am sticking with it
. . . ever notice you never nick a 2007 penny? And the good coins are always wedged under a tree root and besides a rock no?)
The coins (other than the clad) had been between 5 inches and 7 inches deep which is pretty solid considering the size of the coil I had been using.
If you have some sites that you have been through with an Explorer or E-Trac and heard nulling from trash as you hunted it, getting a smaller coil might just reopen some of those sites . . . . . I've been taking the small coil with me in the truck whenever I head out recently just in case I hit a site that is trash-filled.
Let's see some more finds . . . . . even if they were made before the snow hit . . . . . . and how about sharing some pattern / setting files along with explanations as to why changes were made to help others get their detector dialed in before the thaw comes.
Andy Sabisch
I have been using a pattern locally that has worked well for me . . . . . I've attached a copy if anyone wants to experiment with it. If anyone wants an explanation as to what each rejected section is for, let me know . . . . there is actually method to my madness as they say.
This time I went back with the 6 inch Excelerator coil hoping to pull a few more targets out of the site. Well, I was a bit surprised at the results but about 1.5 hours turned up some clad, some trash, 5 Wheat cents ranging from 1917 to 1946 along with the 3 nice silver's in the photo.
(No, that is not a nick on the 1902 Barber . . . . it's only an optical illusion . . . at least that's my story and I am sticking with it

The coins (other than the clad) had been between 5 inches and 7 inches deep which is pretty solid considering the size of the coil I had been using.
If you have some sites that you have been through with an Explorer or E-Trac and heard nulling from trash as you hunted it, getting a smaller coil might just reopen some of those sites . . . . . I've been taking the small coil with me in the truck whenever I head out recently just in case I hit a site that is trash-filled.
Let's see some more finds . . . . . even if they were made before the snow hit . . . . . . and how about sharing some pattern / setting files along with explanations as to why changes were made to help others get their detector dialed in before the thaw comes.
Andy Sabisch