razerback408
Member
what will beet the g2 in iron !!!!!!!!!!!
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yea i know ask a stupid questionHobo lobo said:onions, LOL
o silly mepanama rich said:It was just a stupid misspelling!
Monte said:in typical iron nail trash, then it would depend upon how dense the scattering is, the proximity to a desired non-ferrous target, and then the search coils used, settings used, and sweep speed.
I've been at this great sport for a long, long time and my preferred hunting sites include iron infested ghost towns, homesteads, military and pioneer encampments, old resort sites, railroad stops and stage stops, etc. In most cases, those remote locations are void of standing structures and the ground (along with various amounts of other litter) have a good supply of iron nails from when buildings were torn down or burned down.
Since 1983 my success in such sites has increased a great deal thanks to the so-called quick-response, two-filtered, silent-search detectors. The greatest rewards came when I was using a Tesoro with the expanded lower-end Discrimination (ED-120 in Tesoro lingo), and I also preferred models with manual Ground Balance that was tied in with both operating modes (All Metal and Discrimination), although many of the factory preset GB units worked OK in many places. I also favored a smaller-than-stock search coil. With the Tesoro line, I used the 7" diameter Concentric coil the most.
There were some Tesoro-built models or copy-cat units that stole the circuitry, such as the pillar models (all two of them) and Gold Mountain Technologies Cobra/GMT-1650 and King Cobra. In '94/'95 I switched over a bit and added the White's Coinmaster Classic III Plus, then the Classic III SL, Classic ID and IDX Pro to my arsenal, all using the 6
Monte said:in typical iron nail trash, then it would depend upon how dense the scattering is, the proximity to a desired non-ferrous target, and then the search coils used, settings used, and sweep speed.
I've been at this great sport for a long, long time and my preferred hunting sites include iron infested ghost towns, homesteads, military and pioneer encampments, old resort sites, railroad stops and stage stops, etc. In most cases, those remote locations are void of standing structures and the ground (along with various amounts of other litter) have a good supply of iron nails from when buildings were torn down or burned down.
Since 1983 my success in such sites has increased a great deal thanks to the so-called quick-response, two-filtered, silent-search detectors. The greatest rewards came when I was using a Tesoro with the expanded lower-end Discrimination (ED-120 in Tesoro lingo), and I also preferred models with manual Ground Balance that was tied in with both operating modes (All Metal and Discrimination), although many of the factory preset GB units worked OK in many places. I also favored a smaller-than-stock search coil. With the Tesoro line, I used the 7" diameter Concentric coil the most.
There were some Tesoro-built models or copy-cat units that stole the circuitry, such as the pillar models (all two of them) and Gold Mountain Technologies Cobra/GMT-1650 and King Cobra. In '94/'95 I switched over a bit and added the White's Coinmaster Classic III Plus, then the Classic III SL, Classic ID and IDX Pro to my arsenal, all using the 6
ok on christmas card for you ha haSalida said:Onions? I was thinking more in the lines of Garlic. -) but onions are good.