Neil in West Jersey
New member
I have a site that I like to return to when conditions are right. It is an old drained lake that was once a popular swimming spot. It is often too muddy and other times the ticks and mosquitoes are killer. It has been dry here and it just started warming up, so the grass is still low and the mosquitoes are bearable. I had a small window of opportunity to get in there this weekend and it is still surprisingly muddy.
Anyone who says that the V3i is not a deep detector does not have it set up right. The quarter on the left is a 1950. It was more than 12 inches down in the mud. Granted, it did not have a sweet 84 VDI, but it did have a positive repeatable signal. Needless to say the minerals did a number on this one. Basic settings were Mixed Mode on, RX 12, All Metal 75, Disc 92, Recovery Delay 90 (important on deep signals).
In contrast the 1942 was found on the sandy banks in an iron infested area around the lake at about 4 inches. I left most settings the same and dealt with a lot of screaming from the All Metal channel. The only setting I changed was the Recovery Delay was lowered to 50. I also dug a 1927 Wheatie in the sand as well.
I was using the stock D2 coil. It is a bit easier to swing with all the young trees so close together.
Anyone who says that the V3i is not a deep detector does not have it set up right. The quarter on the left is a 1950. It was more than 12 inches down in the mud. Granted, it did not have a sweet 84 VDI, but it did have a positive repeatable signal. Needless to say the minerals did a number on this one. Basic settings were Mixed Mode on, RX 12, All Metal 75, Disc 92, Recovery Delay 90 (important on deep signals).
In contrast the 1942 was found on the sandy banks in an iron infested area around the lake at about 4 inches. I left most settings the same and dealt with a lot of screaming from the All Metal channel. The only setting I changed was the Recovery Delay was lowered to 50. I also dug a 1927 Wheatie in the sand as well.
I was using the stock D2 coil. It is a bit easier to swing with all the young trees so close together.