Mark in NC
Member
Hi folks... The C$ has amazing ability to sort through close targets, somehow avoiding the problem other detectors have of averaging the junk with the good (where you have a rusty nail and a coin under the coil at the same time, and the detector "combines" the TID into one number) In the same situation, a C$ seems to be able to see both the nail, and the coin separately as the center of the coil passes over each one, sort of disregarding the other target away from the center. My question is about the super deepies. The targets that lie at the very fringe of the detectors depth max in any given soil. In my central NC dirt, a deep silver coin will ID good, say 70% of the swings, and then go iron the other 30%. I have a 8 1/2 inch silver dime in my test garden that is there just for that purpose... to test a detectors response to the fringe coins. The C$ I have now will hit the dime, when maxed out, about like the above percentage of 70/30. This is with thresh. 0 or 5 and sens. 8 and groundbalanced. This C$ becomes one of only a very few detectors I've had that can even tell me the dime possibly something besides deep iron. Finally my question .... how do you long time C$ users decide when to dig the "iffy" deep signals? (say pinpoint in the single digits)? By iffy, I mean they bounce to iron 1/2 to 3/4 of swings... Sorry for the long post, but it's raining here, and I can't go swingin'!...
Thanks,
Mark in NC
Thanks,
Mark in NC