Some have noted that the LTD's TID does not lock on as well as the original. I have had this problem too and I use it mostly in BP. First Texas recommends that you swing completely across the target with the edges of the coil passing over and past the target... I have found this method to give a jumpy TID on many targets. The correct TID will be in there but there will be a lot of other numbers too.
Yesterday I was experimentig on a quarter that I planted a while back, it has a piece of iron close by and every detector I have has a problem with it. It is about 8" deep. None of my machines will hit it when I turn 90 degrees, they will only hit it form one side but will hit it from both swing directions... but they all have trouble with ID, especially with sotck coils. Well... yesterday I tried a "wiggle". I actually anchored the left rear of the coil on the ground and did a fast wiggle of between 1/4" and 1/2"... and it gave me a consistant 84 to 88 TID. The same as a quarter buried at 3 1/2" about a foot away.
I don't know if it will help to stabalize the TID in all conditions but it is worth a try. I'd try it from different directions and use a very short wiggle. For those who are not fimiliar with the wiggle it is just winiging the coil very little and as I said I even kept one corner of the coil in place on the ground.
I have not tried this in the field on other targets but it worked on this target... and this one is particularly hard to ID and remember I was in BP, tones did not seem to matter much but I usually find that switching to one tone when I am having a problem with TID helps... sometimes going to DP helps but, FWIW... on this target the BC mode told me that it was a bottle cap... it is not a bottle cap!
Julien
Yesterday I was experimentig on a quarter that I planted a while back, it has a piece of iron close by and every detector I have has a problem with it. It is about 8" deep. None of my machines will hit it when I turn 90 degrees, they will only hit it form one side but will hit it from both swing directions... but they all have trouble with ID, especially with sotck coils. Well... yesterday I tried a "wiggle". I actually anchored the left rear of the coil on the ground and did a fast wiggle of between 1/4" and 1/2"... and it gave me a consistant 84 to 88 TID. The same as a quarter buried at 3 1/2" about a foot away.
I don't know if it will help to stabalize the TID in all conditions but it is worth a try. I'd try it from different directions and use a very short wiggle. For those who are not fimiliar with the wiggle it is just winiging the coil very little and as I said I even kept one corner of the coil in place on the ground.
I have not tried this in the field on other targets but it worked on this target... and this one is particularly hard to ID and remember I was in BP, tones did not seem to matter much but I usually find that switching to one tone when I am having a problem with TID helps... sometimes going to DP helps but, FWIW... on this target the BC mode told me that it was a bottle cap... it is not a bottle cap!
Julien