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:usaflag: Home built wet/dry sand scoop :detecting:

Cupajo

Active member
I could not find a scoop of the kind I built at anywhere near the cost of these.

They are simple to build and work just fine!

[attachment 131135 100_0006_2.JPG]

This smaller of the two (51/2" X 10 1/2") is great for wet sand and hard digging (not for working the water though)

[attachment 131136 100_0007.JPG]

The larger one (71/2" X 113/4") is great for dry sand, but most of the time I'll use the smaller one

I have done some heavy gravel digging and wet sand digging and dry sand digging and so for I am very pleased with these scoops.

The scoop is made of stainless steel and is not very heavy and is quite strong.

The raw materials cost less than ten dollars per scoop and is easy to assemble..

[attachment 131138 100_0008_3.JPG]

[attachment 131132 Homemadesandscoop2.JPG]

I found the raw material at a local metal scrap yard for less than $10.00 per scoop.

The larger one has an aluminum handle and the smaller one has a tubular steel handle and as they are kept dry the handles should last many years.

The bucket is stainless and is a metal labratory container (cost about a dollar as scrap) found at a local scrap metal recycling yard..

The welded stainless 1/2" mesh (Very strong!!) is from a labratory cage such as mice are housed in and again scrap metal for about a dollar at the same source.

The handle I found with several others at the recycling bin at our local dump----Free!!

Two 1/4" stainless steel bolts, nuts, lock washers, and two larger outside diameter fender washers about three dollars at our local hardware store.

A bit of careful cutting (using a 4" grinder with an abrasive cut-off wheel), drilling (2----1/4'' holes with a portable electric hand drill) and assembly have produced two really durable, low cost scoops that have served me well for a while now!!

Scoops of this caliber would cost many times what I have invested and there is the satisfaction of building a very useful tool.

Building them required using the abrasive cutting wheel (eye protection is a must!!) to cut off the rolled lip of the stainless container, then the bottom is removed i the same way.

I then split the length of the container for the smaller scoop to allow squeezing the resulting split tube down to a uniform diameter using a ratchet type tie down strap.

When the tube was a diameter I was satisfied with I drilled two 1/4" holes through the overlapped part of the resulting smaller tube form and therefore had a re-inforced section where the resulting over-lap occurred to attach the handle to.

The handle is a bent tubular piece of an old folding bed or some such thing.

I used a metal cutting blade in a hack-saw to make the handle the length I desired and after removing the sharp edges and burrs left by cutting of the various metal pieces with a file, I assembled the scoop.

The wire is rolled into a tube of the desired diameter and the protruding ends are wrapped around the contact parts to lock the tube into its shape permanently.

A piece of the wire screen is cut and fitted and secured in a similar fashion as a bottom and the finished product is a very strong and durable stainless steel sand scoop.

CJ
 
Nice job on those scoops. anything you can build, you can build better than China and the money saved making your own scoops from recycled material is thrifty and sustainable at the same time. My hats off to you. good craftsmanship.
 
Cupajo

If you have problems with them sinking under water you could fill them with that expandable foam inside the handle and have the handle portion stay afloat if used in the water.

I have temporally lost my hand held one 3 times and had to wait for the water to clear to retrieve it. I plan on adding a little of the foam inside mine when I get the chance.

Nice work I must say. I need one of those and I just might build one!

Thanks for sharing your design

Don
 
Thanks for your kind words Don.

I built a heavy duty scoop for in the water as I've mentioned in past posts.

These two are for out of the water digging and would never withstand the demands of water hunting as I know it.

GL&HH Friend,

CJ
 
Cupajo

Could you send me the water shovels via email? I sure would be interested in those as well.

Thanks

Don
 
Hi DJR,

For your viewing pleasure----my home built "Poor Man's Back Hoe"!!

[attachment 131649 SandScoopPoorMansBackhoe002.jpg]

These two scoops have dug up tons of heavy stone and sand and are still serviceable today!

They are a bit heavy (the one I use most is about twelve pounds), but still a joy to use!

I have not found a suitable replacement or they would be scrap now.

GL&HH Friend,

Cj

PS I have dug up around 300 gold rings at this point using these scoops!

Considering that for every ring I dug perhaps a hundred pounds or more of junk the huge amount of material would have trashed lesser equipment!!
 
Holy moley!

Them are big shovels!

Who needs a detector when you have a shovel like that!

Of course under water it probably weighs near nothing right?

Don
 
Hi Don,

The one I use is about 12lbs now that it has an aluminum handle and when I use it I drag it along by the handle until I need to dig with it so it can't interfere with the coil.

I also prefer using a sifter and you can see mine in several past posts.

In a few days I will be 68 years of age and I can still load the scoop full of sand and gravel into the sifter, so I guess the old "Hoe" isn't too heavy yet.

I do sometimes think I should be using a lighter scoop, but not many can stand up to the kind of digging I do.
and the "Hoes" are designed just for it.

CJ
 
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