Listen up guys and gals its not rocket science relative the depth of a CZ.
Hottest issue in town right now is my CZ is deeper than your yours and have heard if it doesn't hit a clad dime at 12 inches its inferior and some are saying the new incorporated CZ's are not as deep. Simple procedure in the field turn on your CZ, properly ground balance and use it for 10 minutes or so to let it warm up and stabilize. Take a dime out of your pouch and simply start from an inch or two to find the hot spot and work out and you should get 10 inches or so, better yet the next time you get in an older area and get a high coin hit raise the coil to the max depth where it will sound off and that should give you an idea once you dig of your units useable depth. Having used ever model CZ ever made some several times I have gotten 10-12 inch dimes and the proof is in the pudding and in the ground is where it counts as factory lab tests mean nothing to me. I suppose one might go an inch deeper than another but all compnents are not the same.
I read these posts and shake my head as no one says my Mickey Mouse Special detector is deeper than yours but then again CZ's depth is the standard many use to gauge if their unit is as deep.
Is a CZ old technology sure is and certainly not perfect but coil for coil is as deep as any in a user friendly fashion compared with a lot of bells and whistles, graphs, programs better than sliced bread units.
In addendum lets hope they keep making them but for that matter as many that were made in the last 20 years or so should be still some nice used ones floating around hitting the classifieds to keep the avid CZ user having one in his arsenal.
Hottest issue in town right now is my CZ is deeper than your yours and have heard if it doesn't hit a clad dime at 12 inches its inferior and some are saying the new incorporated CZ's are not as deep. Simple procedure in the field turn on your CZ, properly ground balance and use it for 10 minutes or so to let it warm up and stabilize. Take a dime out of your pouch and simply start from an inch or two to find the hot spot and work out and you should get 10 inches or so, better yet the next time you get in an older area and get a high coin hit raise the coil to the max depth where it will sound off and that should give you an idea once you dig of your units useable depth. Having used ever model CZ ever made some several times I have gotten 10-12 inch dimes and the proof is in the pudding and in the ground is where it counts as factory lab tests mean nothing to me. I suppose one might go an inch deeper than another but all compnents are not the same.
I read these posts and shake my head as no one says my Mickey Mouse Special detector is deeper than yours but then again CZ's depth is the standard many use to gauge if their unit is as deep.
Is a CZ old technology sure is and certainly not perfect but coil for coil is as deep as any in a user friendly fashion compared with a lot of bells and whistles, graphs, programs better than sliced bread units.
In addendum lets hope they keep making them but for that matter as many that were made in the last 20 years or so should be still some nice used ones floating around hitting the classifieds to keep the avid CZ user having one in his arsenal.