I got out today with the T2 for a hunt at a local park that we've dug coins as old as seated coins from. It was somewhat of a discouraging day for a couple of reasons. I should say first of all me and my friends have absolutely hammered this park. Knock your socks off type of signals are non-existent. The most annoying issue was for some unknown reason the T2 was dragging deep round pulltabs up into the 70's range when they were over 6-7 inches deep. The numbers were bouncing but the audio ID was 95% the correct tone for those numbers using 4 tones. I dig that range because some IHs fall in that area... I expect square pulltabs but not round. I dug an IH that hit from 75-78 or so. Earlier in the day I also ran into another quirk. I inadvertently flipped the machine to 3b tone mode. We'll in that mode I was getting a high tone for any round tab more than 3-4 inches deep. It would do the same thing out of the ground. So, if someone would flip the T2 into 3b mode and grab a round pulltab and airtest it with an increasing distance. Please tell me what it does. The IDs were in the high 90's which ended up making me cycle through my settings. That's when I discovered that I was in 3b mode. There were indications in both instances that something was not right. One the number were bouncy and the other the ID numbers were too high. Since I mostly go by audio it's a bit annoying. I think I really need to take the T2 to easier territory where there some easy coins left to learn it before jumping into my pounded sites head first...
I am definitely not speaking against the T2 because I have alot of hours on my Explorer and a good bit with my 3D. Both of those machines have their quirks. The first 10 or so times out with the Explorer I was ready to rap it around a tree...
GB was from 56-61 mostly in the 50's. I did ended with a few wheaties a 41 nickel and an IH. So all is not lost! I almost forgot to say I GBed often. Ran the sens. high and low. Not much difference.
-Bill


-Bill