Find's Treasure Forums

Welcome to Find's Treasure Forums, Guests!

You are viewing this forums as a guest which limits you to read only status.

Only registered members may post stories, questions, classifieds, reply to other posts, contact other members using built in messaging and use many other features found on these forums.

Why not register and join us today? It's free! (We don't share your email addresses with anyone.) We keep email addresses of our users to protect them and others from bad people posting things they shouldn't.

Click here to register!



Need Support Help?

Cannot log in?, click here to have new password emailed to you

PI's for larger objects

A

Anonymous

Guest
Discussion on this forum usually revolves around the small, low conductive objects like gold rings. But how about a line or two on PI's capability on a quart size jar of silver dollars or a gallon size iron box that may contain some goodies. Which machines in what order do you then recommend? What kind of depth does a HeadhunterPI have vs. the GP Extreme vs the Deepstar on larger items? Thanks.
 
John,
I think we has this go around the last time you were interested.
The best choice is the Deepstar because of it
 
If I was to take the Deepstar, Goldquest or the Headhunter out for a spin to look for granny's jar of coins, what adjustment in the frequency setting would one change if I had just left the beach looking for rings. Also what is a S.A.T.?
 
John,
S.A.T.: Self Adjusting Threshold. This is a circuit that maintains the threshold settings as you sweep the coil over ground. Changes in ground makeup alter the threshold as you sweep. With S.A.T. it does the circuit re-setting for you. The Deepstar, Aquastar, and the Goldquest SS, have a control the user can adjust, to change the rate of when the circuit re-sets automatically.
Most detectors today employ S.A.T., VLF, and PI.. It is the motion needed, in the motion mode. Without motion, the S.A.T. tunes out the target, trying to maintain the threshold. In no motion pin point, as in some VLF detectors, that turns off the S.A.T. so you can pin point easier.
With the adjustable S.A.T. control, one can set up the threshold re-set speed for the different hunting conditions encountered while detecting. With slower S.A.T. speeds, one can detect targets deeper than they can in the same instance with a fast S.A.T., because your giving the circuit more time to analyze the signal. The trade off is that the ground will also have a affect. Tougher ground generally requires a faster S.A.T..
Well that
 
I have a Beachscan PI. I have posted some of the things found on the beach forum a while back. I have found a 3" round x 2" thick hunk of metal at 2` deep with this using a 11" coil. I had other signals which I dug down to 2` and they were still there but I refused to dig any deeper as I am sure they were old iron junk. This was on a freshwater beach. PIs do go deep and I believe a coffee can sized item at 2.5`+ is not unusual. You just have to have the back for diggin it. Good huntin, JCP/Ct.
 
Top