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A tough little lesson on ground noise.

BarnacleBill

New member
Last evening I received a call from a family friend that had lost a 1/4 carat diamond stud earring. The location was a newly completed outdoor athletic facility that was finished this past spring which has several soccer pitches(UK).

I had agreed to meet the lady at noon today and had asked her to bring along the remaining earring so that I could take a reading on it. On board the Barnacle Buggy I had brought an X70 with HF concentric, X50 with HF DD, and a Fisher Edge with 5.75inch coil. The earring turned out to be a yellow gold fairly standard sized stud.

First order of business was to crank up the sensitivity to max on each machine and air test the earring for ID. The X50 showed a "+3", the X70 a "+2", and the Edge a "+12". I noted the disparity in ID on the Fisher.

As this athletic facility is new it consists of sand & gravel with a very thin layer of loam to seed the grass. I then GB'd each machine and placed the earring on the ground with the X70 GB'ing at 12 as a point of reference.

With the Edge GB'd, sensitivity @10 and in All Metal mode the earring on top of the ground ID'd as iron in the -15 to -20 range. Next with the X50 GB'd, sensitivity @20 in All Metal the earring on top of the ground ID'd as iron hitting -6,-9. Lastly I had the X70 in Coins mode All Metal with sensitivity @30 and the earring ID'd once again as iron. I changed locations and re-checked just so I was sure I was not losing my mind.

The upshot is that only with the X70 in prospecting mode and Iron Mask at 5 could this earring be distinguished from iron, and this is laying on top of the ground not below it. I searched for several hours in Prospecting mode but did not find the earring. Unfortunately when the fill had been trucked in, they trucked in trash with it, and it was not the most enjoyable couple hours I've spent with a detector.

It is a sobering thought to know that without using Prospecting mode or digging every target in Coins All Metal mode that I am walking over earring studs that are simply invisible.

HH
BarnacleBill
 
Bill,

Is there any particular reason you set them all up at max Sensitivity?

My Lake Michigan beaches GB at 10-11 on the X70. The sand is mostly quartz and lightly mineralized. Depth and sensitivity is very good with any detector. In the damp sand the X70 hits coins as deep if not deeper than anything. Sure makes one wonder about what those GB readings mean!

Tom
 
Max Sensitivity:

Even at max setting on the X70, at a distance of 2 inches the target in the air was iffy. Had to be at one inch for a decent reading. I don't know what the karat on this earring was, but it was a deep yellow, leading me to believe that 18K was likely. I have found stud earrings before, but this was the most non-responsive I have seen. But it also stands to reason if there are many in the ground like this one, they are rarely going to be found.

Looks like it's time to raid the wife's gold vault for a science project.:lol:

HH
BarnacleBill
 
Invisble to standard VLF's that is. The propecting modes on the X70 and MXT are useable on some beaches but boy, what an ear full they give in the more trashy areas.

Tom
 
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