I've been using an Ex II (my first) for 2 months + and have made some good finds with it at a 120 year old park that I've hunted since last winter with several other detectors. The park is loaded with nails of all sizes along with some deep large ferrous and non ferrous items. The main problem I've had is falsing, but I also wanted to know what techniques other users imploy at sites like this park. I've mostly used 'all metal', ML 8" and Sunray X-5 coil, manual sens 20, ferrous tones,and normal response. I've dug a lot of nails on iffy signals (ferrous & non ferrous mix of tones). The Explorer's tones are unique, and ferrous and non ferrous trash next to a coin distorts the audio response to a degree that it can be difficult to consistently ID a good target next to trash. x-ing or circling a target helps, but what changes in audio responses should I be listening for when I'm at sites like the above?
While practicing at home I'll place several old coins in amongst old rusty nails of vary sizes and non ferrous trash and try to keep the coil about 5-6" above the targets. I want to see how the trash affects the audo and ID in the following ways:
- How accurately can it still ID a coin
- How much do the nails mask the coins
- What responses do I get from one, two and four way swings
- What does the mix of tones sound like and hopefully memorize some of the responses
- What is happening with the cursor on the smartfind screen
- How pinpointing the coins and iron differ
I've had some success with iffy signals at the park with what I've learned while practicing, but to a larger extent it seems that laying coins and nails on the ground next to each other doesn't seem to accurately simulate how nails actually affect the detector's processor when the nails are in the ground. Old nails, especially old large bent nails in the ground are difficult to interpret (whether it's me or the processor) as iron or a good target as oppose to practicing, when the Explorer's ID is usually accurate and consistent.
Different types of ground illicit different responses. This park also has some hot rocks, has a clay layer starting about 6
While practicing at home I'll place several old coins in amongst old rusty nails of vary sizes and non ferrous trash and try to keep the coil about 5-6" above the targets. I want to see how the trash affects the audo and ID in the following ways:
- How accurately can it still ID a coin
- How much do the nails mask the coins
- What responses do I get from one, two and four way swings
- What does the mix of tones sound like and hopefully memorize some of the responses
- What is happening with the cursor on the smartfind screen
- How pinpointing the coins and iron differ
I've had some success with iffy signals at the park with what I've learned while practicing, but to a larger extent it seems that laying coins and nails on the ground next to each other doesn't seem to accurately simulate how nails actually affect the detector's processor when the nails are in the ground. Old nails, especially old large bent nails in the ground are difficult to interpret (whether it's me or the processor) as iron or a good target as oppose to practicing, when the Explorer's ID is usually accurate and consistent.
Different types of ground illicit different responses. This park also has some hot rocks, has a clay layer starting about 6