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Took the MX5 out...

coinjumper

New member
for change of pace, threw the 10dd on and left v3i at home an hr of usual digging at an old school yard along river Rd westbank N.O. One notch under max sens, low audible hum. All at once I got a threshold "bump", hi tone and 91 vdi flash, heard about this scenario before,dug down 8" , saw the bright edge of a coin, was 41' walking half, only my second one, was a good day.
 
Love my MX5. Never heard of or tried this. So you heard the threshold bump separately or simultaneously with the high tone? I usually run mine at lower sensitivity but have an area I would love to try this. And were you in 8 tone or 2 tone? Thanks, and congrats.
 
coinjumper said:
for change of pace, threw the 10dd on and left v3i at home an hr of usual digging at an old school yard along river Rd westbank N.O. One notch under max sens, low audible hum. All at once I got a threshold "bump", hi tone and 91 vdi flash, heard about this scenario before,dug down 8" , saw the bright edge of a coin, was 41' walking half, only my second one, was a good day.

Nice find coinjumper,

I can't believe White's dropped the MX5 from the lineup, in the past they have done this with the IDX Pro. They also dumped other great detectors in favor of something new but inferior. The MX5 will become a cult classic, I believe and will be sought after long after the replacement proves to be a lessor detector.

..I set mine up in 1 tone with the first 3 iron segments notched out, it does incredibly well in thick small iron (nails).
 
slingshot said:
Love my MX5. Never heard of or tried this. So you heard the threshold bump separately or simultaneously with the high tone? I usually run mine at lower sensitivity but have an area I would love to try this. And were you in 8 tone or 2 tone? Thanks, and congrats.
It was 1,2,3, very fast bump, high tone then 91, someone mentioned this in a post way back, I was in 8 tone one notch below max sens.
 
Coinjumper, after you dig several targets with this particular response, you will eagerly await the next similar signal. The MX5 is seems to get a "bad rap" , but in my opinion, it is the "sleeper" in Whites lineup. Too bad Whites discontinued it. I sold my last one to a hunting buddy and he routinely out hunts people with detectors costing three times as much. I have sold him two detectors in the last four years and I recently tried to trade for his MX5, but no luck there.
 
RLOH said:
Coinjumper, after you dig several targets with this particular response, you will eagerly await the next similar signal. The MX5 is seems to get a "bad rap" , but in my opinion, it is the "sleeper" in Whites lineup. Too bad Whites discontinued it. I sold my last one to a hunting buddy and he routinely out hunts people with detectors costing three times as much. I have sold him two detectors in the last four years and I recently tried to trade for his MX5, but no luck there.
We're you the original poster about this scenario? I had been waiting and watching for it for a long time, if you were, thanks for that post!
 
RLOH said:
Coinjumper, after you dig several targets with this particular response, you will eagerly await the next similar signal. The MX5 is seems to get a "bad rap" , but in my opinion, it is the "sleeper" in Whites lineup. Too bad Whites discontinued it. I sold my last one to a hunting buddy and he routinely out hunts people with detectors costing three times as much. I have sold him two detectors in the last four years and I recently tried to trade for his MX5, but no luck there.
I once preferred a notch detector but with the 8 tone function I just breeze thru sites and the tones let me know instantly the probability of the target. And the response is so fast I can hear two targets in close proximity- and I hardly ever use the pinpoint function. I knew from day one I would keep this detector.
 
So glad I grabbed an MX5 whilst I had the chance.......exceeded my expectations by a very long way !
 
Yes, I believe I was the original poster about how deep coins respond with the MX5. I know many people are critical of Whites MX7, but if it is anything like the MX5, I will be trying one. I do believe the auto track can be locked with the 7. Randy is the guru with the MX5 and I totally agree with him when he never had any issues with the auto track. So far a being cheaply built, the days of metal boxed detectors are long gone. I do like the metal boxed Whites detectors, but plastic, carbon fiber is the future. The MX5 was not as light as a Tesoro, but is near perfectly balanced with the rear mount battery. I see nothing wrong with Whites using interchangable parts like the battery compartments, rods, and etc. As long as they perform, I am happy.
 
Whites Detectors are all I use now, when I first started I was all over the place with brands, glad I've settled. I've had whites exceed my expectations by throwing my m6 onto an Mxt rod setup for $0 a few yrs ago, they totally won me over at that moment, American made, great product and service Imho, what else can you ask for?
 
They sure don't surface as often as they used to and it's always a thrill to make such a recovery. Only your 2nd W.L. 50¢ piece? How long have you been detecting, and is it mostly in popular urban-type Coin Hunting sites?

You are using what I consider to be one of the better White's detectors to come along in many years ... not counting the more recent MX Sport and pending MX7. I had long leaned on my MXT Pro to take care of most Coin & Jewelry Hunting tasks and also serve me when Relic Hunting older, iron trash choked out-of-the-way sites. For open territory with spare targets I like to use the standard open-frame 9" Concentric coil, but the bulk of my hunting, of any type, had the 6½" Concentric coil mounted on the working-end. Personally, I never was fond of the 10" D2 DD coil and had too many of them fail or just show poor performance.

I see you were using the 8-Tone audio option which is another feature I might have hunted with a total of about 15 minutes. The bulk of my searches had/have me using 2-Tone and rejecting the first three Iron-range segments, or the same Disc. setting and 1-Tone at times. Sensitivity was almost always 8 bars or more. I switched to some other detectors that provided me more versatile performance and packaging that I preferred in January of 2015, and they continue to work exceptionally well.

But I like to use what works, for me and in the really challenging sites I prefer to hunt, regardless of the manufacturer so I have owned and used a lot of brands through the years. I relied on home-built detectors from '65 to '68, but that summer I got my first factory-produced detector in my hands, which was a White's model, and for almost five decades now I have usually had one or more White's detectors in my personal arsenal. Today, that spot is filled with the MX5 simply because I like it's weight and balance, ease of use, and it is a 'friendly' detector for many newcomers to handle, too. I take it out now-and-then but mainly keep it on-hand as a loaner unit for friends, family, and to invite a landowner to use to join in the fun ... as a tool to help get private property access on occasion.

I keep the stock 9" spoked Concentric mounted as it works OK and has a more 'modern' or 'fashionable' look to it than some blah looking coil designs.

Keep your MX5 hard at work and I wish you the best and hope it won't be a longer wait before you encounter another silver half.

Monte
 
Monte, I been at it for abt 10 yrs and don't get out alot, urban type coin hunting. I bought my mx5 from you I guess 3-4 yrs ago.
 
I am not referring to errors made in design glitches or poor performance behavior or terrible packaging. Yes, those happen with all detector makers at some point in time, but I am referring to the errors of poor marketing as well as discontinuing decent models.

It sure happened with the Classic series. White's had some great moderate to fast-motion detector models but fell short of the competition in the slow-motion/quick-response and recovery category for a while. That part of the market was really commandeered by some very good Tesoro detectors and all manufacturers needed to try and challenge it. White's did by adopting the design made by Wm. 'Bill' Lahr with the Coinmaster Classic units, and then they made them even better by moving the circuitry design to the 'slim-line' housing like the XLT used, and going from three rotation-required 9V battery power to the 8-AA battery tray.

By '98 we had the slow-motion TID versions in the Classic ID and that was followed by adding the Classic IDX/IDX Pro to their offerings. Very good 'turn-on-and-go' models as they were, and even more versatile with Bill Crabtree's modifications to add an external Threshold and 1-turn Ground Balance control. That was something a couple of engineers at White's thought would make a good factory design advancement of the Classic series, but higher authorities didn't. They also put a lot of effort into promoting their upper-end models and almost completely ignored marketing and promoting the simple-to-use Classic series ... both to consumers as well as their dealers.

Then someone upstairs, or who just shows up now and then, decided to let them go in favor of the poor-performing Prizm series. Anyone with a decent Classic ID or IDX Pro, especially with a 6½" or 8" Concentric coil, knows just how good they can be for a wide range of hunting applications. Fancy? Nope, not at all. 'Functional?' Yes, a very competitive unit in that value range of detectors especially in tough iron littered environments. Some of the best detectors for irony conditions White's has ever offered.

Then we get a model that I really liked, even though it has some design errors that annoy me, and that is the MX5. A 'Simple' to use design with ample features and adjustments to make it very 'Functional' for a wide-range of uses. And for both Traditional Coin & Jewelry Hunting or for serious Relic Hunting in dense trash, where I spend most of my time, the MX5 provides very decent 'Performance' with the right size/type search coil mounted. For me, the MX5 can get the job done with just two search coils: The standard open-frame 9" Concentric for more open, sparse-target sites, and my favorite, the 6½" Concentric [size=small](labeled the 5.3 Eclipse)[/size], for all other hunting needs. A dandy set-up for urban Coin Hunting in modern trash or Relic Hunting around building rubble and a lot of nails and other ferrous junk.

In the field, in side-by-side comparisons using the same search coil and done by myself or when comparing performance with others, the MX5 provided slightly better depth-of-detection than the M6 or MXT Pro/All-Pro models. My current detector battery, as October came to an end, included only one White's detector and that is the MX5 which I feel is the best value that they have been offering for the past four years or so. I have owned several M6's and MXT Pro series models, the VX3 and V3i,ut of them all the MX5 provided me the best all-purpose performance.

Yes, the MX Sport was introduced but those units I tried initially didn't work well and we all know they had several glitches to work out. It seems they got everything taken care of and other than Tom Boykin at White's who uses one with good report, I have a good friend out of the Portland, Oregon area who started with an M6 I sold him, added the V3i [size=small](and seems to have an excellent grasp of how to get the best out of it than anyone I know who I have hunted with)[/size], and then he got a good working MX Sport. He's done very well with it, and when I checked it out briefly on an outing we had this past spring I could see the strengths that I happened to like about ilt. And the negatives, but the basic circuitry design was appealing to me.

But for what I needed at the time, mainly for occasional use and mainly as a 'loaner unit,' the MX5 was just the ticket to add back into my arsenal. It made sense to have an 'MX' series and the MX5 would make a great lower-cost model in the line that did not have inferior performance and what did White's do? They discontinued the MX5 and kept the M6 and MXT Pro in their line-up. Personally I would have dropped the price significantly on the M6 and MXT Pro to clean them out of the inventory and discontinue them since they are over-priced compared with what is available from the competitor's today. Then I would have planned for a more modern, better-performing mid-priced land unit that would be competitive and dropped the MX5 to $499.95 and keep it in the product line.

I know I let mine go when I sold off almost all my other detectors makes and models almost four years ago, but the MX5 was one device White's made that I felt I needed to add back into my Specialty-Use Detector Team, so I did. If anyone has an MX5 but hasn't put in the time and effort to get to know it better, I think they ought to because it is definitely one of the better models they have offered in the past couple of decades. I had to overlook the two main things that annoyed me, the headphone jack location and the lack of a Track-Lock function, but for most folks the MX5 ought to serve them well.

Too bad the MX5 was discontinued but there still are some nice specimens out there to be found that are just slightly used at very reasonable prices. Nab them while you can!

Monte
 
I got my MX5 so I would have the extras like g/b, tones, ID, etc while gaining a little more depth- just in case I came across a likely location. Sure enough, I found some coins an inch or two deeper than my fixed g/b arsenal. What I didn't expect was the ability to lower the sensitivity and walk thru my usual sites with the 8 tone function FASTER and with more success than my notch or tone ID arsenal. The tones are spaced just right,and I had no trouble recognizing them- a pleasant surprise to me! I still get an occasional 5" dime or quarter in an oft hunted site. I'm 70 years old and the fun factor is important, as I don't usually last longer than 4-5 hours a hunt nowadays.
 
I have always struggled trying to remember people names, and Forum 'Author' names people use makes it even more challenging. Number are no problem, but names??? I thought it might have been you who got the MX5 but I wasn't sure. Thanks for the 'refresher.'

Not getting out a lot in just the past 10 years of hunting can make it tougher to find some of those older coin favorites. Glad you plucked that one up! :clapping: Naturally a lot will depend upon how often we get out to enjoy this great sport, and it is always a must to consider Location, Location, Location. I still find more clad halves and silver halves in the traditional urban Coin Hunting sites I work, but from time-to-time a nice silver surprise surfaces when Relic Hunting old-use and almost non-discernible places as well.

Let's hope you can luck upon a few half-hiding sites again in the near future.

Monte
 
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