I bought my second Omega last winter and it has been sharing time with an Etrac. While the Etrac is an amazing detector, the Omega is starting open my eyes and save my elbow-shoulder. I use the 11 inch dd coil and I am finding this setup to be deadly. I hunt with nothing notched and disc set at 15. I can sweep either fast or slow and I seem to get great depth. I have found a slower sweep will produce multiple targets in the same hole. I dig very small plugs and many times I will find two or even three different pieces of junk in these small plugs. Today's episode was a bouncing 56 from one direction to an 84 from 90degree angle. With an Omega, you better check these signals out because of how accurate and sensitive this detector is. The pinpoint showed only 4 inches and directly in the center of the hole comes a pencil eraser metal holder. These things are terrible when hunting a school because they read exactly like a nickel(56-57) I rechecked the hole with my Propointer but got no signal. Rescanned the hole with the detector before filling in the plug and got a perfect 84 signal. I dug another 4 inches and found a 1922 wheatie. Nothing earthshattering, but this kind of dual target scenario happens at least once every time out. I have found the Omega to be a near perfect detector for coin hunting, but I do have one complaint. I seem to have some problems with very small pieces of foil like a small part of a gum wrapper. I get a perfect 84 high tone that is very weak like a deep coin. It pinpoints like a deeper coin and when I dig, it is not a deep coin, but a very small wad of gum wrapper, usually three inches or so deep. I must get fooled at least 10 times a day by these signals and I can't seem to get any hints to what they are. I can get a hint with a rusty bottlecap with high tones, but numbers 10 digits off when checked at angles. This small foil does not vary on tones or numbers. Any hints? R.L.