I often read a post about sweep speed and have done some testing to see how much difference it makes how fast we sweep the coil. These tests were done with a couple of things in mind. The lowest frequency of operation is about 3.5khz, I say about as engineers round these figures off, and the highest is 100khz. This means in electronic terms the target is essentially standing still no matter how fast we humans can swing the coil. At 3,500 pulses per second we are not going to swing the coil so fast that we outrun the electronics. This was a given so the other consideration was that the detector needs motion so how much is needed. One last concern was will a new user try to move the coil so slow that they actually miss targets.
I decided to test actual targets in the soil as they were located. It takes some time to locate targets at different depths and types then go through a testing routine to see how the different functions perform but that is how I spend a lot of detecting time. I could never swing the detector so fast that a target could not be detected as long as I was consistent with the sweep. Once the target was located and pinpointed so I knew the center of the target there was no way to sweep the coil so fast that the target was not detected.
I could move the coil so slow that the target was not detected at a level that was sufficient enough that I would recognize the target from ground noise. Since motion is required there is a point where the motion is so slow that targets break up or they are not detected at all. If you are like I am to say to move the coil so it covers so much soil in a second just will not work for me in that I cannot get a good feel for that speed. It is difficult to come up with an example that we all relate to when it comes to sweep speed. I would describe it as about the speed a buffer is moved across a hallway if you don
I decided to test actual targets in the soil as they were located. It takes some time to locate targets at different depths and types then go through a testing routine to see how the different functions perform but that is how I spend a lot of detecting time. I could never swing the detector so fast that a target could not be detected as long as I was consistent with the sweep. Once the target was located and pinpointed so I knew the center of the target there was no way to sweep the coil so fast that the target was not detected.
I could move the coil so slow that the target was not detected at a level that was sufficient enough that I would recognize the target from ground noise. Since motion is required there is a point where the motion is so slow that targets break up or they are not detected at all. If you are like I am to say to move the coil so it covers so much soil in a second just will not work for me in that I cannot get a good feel for that speed. It is difficult to come up with an example that we all relate to when it comes to sweep speed. I would describe it as about the speed a buffer is moved across a hallway if you don