Whimpster said:
hihosilver
I've got a number of five pin coils...7",5.75,8" and 10.5" all concentric coils.....would the 3x18 clean sweep be a good coil...any other tips that would help in the learning curve...
Thank you
hihosilver said:
I recommend a smaller coil for it... either the 7 inch wide scan, which I think works very well, or the 5.75 concentric. I think both work better than the 9x8 spoked coil.
Whimpster, I have never tried anything larger than the 9x8 concentric. I have heard and read about the clean sweep on the golden, that it works well because of the narrow field of detection, but you will need to adjust the internal GB pot to ground balance (if need be).
I noticed with my golden that often times the tones were too mixed or conglomerated with the 9x8 coil. I think that what happens is two or more targets under that coil sound off, creating confusion to the ear. I also noticed that this coil would pick up deeper pulltabs with a soft high tone. The 7inch widescan solved that problem and, I personally have not been fooled by too many bottle caps, even though it's a widescan coil.
My only real complaint is that it is not a deep coil, I think the 5.75 concentric might be deeper but I have not really tried it yet because I would need to adjust the GB pot and I don't want to do that, as I had Tesoro tune the detector to the 7 inch WS when I sent it in for a minor repair. (The 5.75 airtests deeper than the 7 inch WS, but over actual ground, the WS does better.)
The Golden is a fun detector and I think mine is deep enough for the parks I hunt in. After a while, you can really tell when you hit a quarter too.
As far as the notch, I have found that using it does not cause the detector to lose depth, only higher disc does that, anything above foil really starts to reduce depth. But, you don't need to raise the disc so high, that's what having tones are for, right?
I don't supertune either. I like to flip the toggle over to all metal sometimes to hear how a target sounds and having threshold set super high would make using all metal useless.
I guess the last thing I will comment about is the tones themselves. I have the original configuration that keeps the tones in their proper conductive order, so a zinc sounds off where it should, with the higher middle tone. Some seem to think that the two middle tones are too close together, but after some use it is easy to tell the difference (or if you need to, take a nickel with you to remind you how the lower middle tone sounds.)
I run mine with the notch width bob set at about 10:00 o'clock, this has the nickel just sounding off with the lower middle tone as well as smaller gold rings (my wedding band, my wife's band as well). At this setting pretty much all the tabs I own (different samples from the ground) all sound off with the higher middle tone. In fact
, the only kind of aluminum I cannot eliminate from the lower middle tone is smaller can slaw and some of the smaller round foil caps from the sports drinks, everything else is eliminated. So, I get a lot of nickels, cause I always dig that lower middle tone.
Good luck with yours, hope you find the gold with the golden.