rustedwoodsman
New member
Howdy All, I just joined the forum today, but I've been reading your posts for the last 4 months or so. After 1 month with the V3i, I'm going back through the posts for a second/third time. In doing so, I came across the post where Rob asked if anyone was Having a Problem? To my surprise, no one is!! All of the responses seemed to be amazed that anyone could be still lost after 500 hours on the V. I don't have the patience to put in 500 unsuccessful hours, but I've hit my first 50, and things aren't looking very good. I don't know any V3i owners, don't have a club within 2.5 hours, and my dealer is 4 hours away. So I'm hoping I can get some help here. If this fails, I'll make the trip to the dealer, and after that, maybe I'll add another 3 hours and visit Sweet Home. Retirement does give you time to play!
I live in central WA on the east side of the cascades. Here in the valley the soil is generally a rocky, sandy loam (maybe rocky, rocky loam). I'm waiting for the snow to finish melting and my ability to improve before hitting the mountain sites I've been researching. Phase has been very consistent at -93, and the strength usually runs about 4.5%. Signal is always under 10% (3 to 4 the most common) and noise is only 1 to 4 percent. EMI? I suspect not much! The only site I found that actually demonstrates EMI is the set up video by EMS. His EMI expands his spectrograph bars way to the right, and he says that no correction is necessary. (steady hum, not pulsating) When I find EMI (I often do) it's usually just a "wobbling" noise with no expansion of the bars, and in the lower frequencies. If the bars do expand, it's usually just a small amount to the left. If I stand there holding the pinpoint trigger, the volume will start to "ratchet up".I don't know if any of this is significant? My understanding is no harm, no foul. As long as the detector is (in my view) stable enough, the wobble in the threshold has no direct affect on performance? (Possible "masking" aside)
The problem: I can't get the V3i to perform any better than the 5900 DP SL that I awoke from it's ten year retirement.
In the test garden: the 5900 in DISCRIMINATION mode can ID a penny, dime and quarter at 4", and a quarter at 6". The 6" penny and dime are giving me noise, but nothing on the meter. It does nothing on the 8" coins. IN SAT I get a pretty loud responses on all of the 6" coins, and something out of the 8" quarter and penny. If in a very clean site, I'd dig the 8" responses. The 8" dime would be hard to recognize from normal ground irregularity. Coins on the open ground will hit 6/7" and MAYBE 7 to 8" in pinpoint.
Most of the standard V3i (stock 10" 2D coil) programs (C&J, Coin, Hi Trash) that use discrimination will perform very close to these same numbers! I can do a little better with the disc and the Hi Pro program. I was getting good sound and "reasonable VDIs" on 25% of my swings over the 6" dime and penny. Usually it comes down to good hits in one direction (moving around the target) and from one side. At 8", I'd have to swing for a long time to get a good sound out of the quarter, NO positive VDI numbers, and nothing at all out of the other 2 8" coins. If I switch Hi Pro to Mixed Mode, I can get FAINT AM hits on all of the 8" coins, but no VDIs of any kind.
Ground Balancing. There's a post out there by Low Boy in regards to GB (8/22/11 I think is the one), and finding the "best place" to balance. In trashy parks, finding a clean place can take a lot of walking around. Looking back at the Set up video by EMS, the video shows a ground PP of 13", I have never come close to touching that. In my yard, and in the park sites, I usually PP the clean ground at 6 to 7 inches. That's the best I can do. So I PP and start detecting. But as I learn how VERY CRITICAL this GB seems to be, I'm wondering if I ever really get a good GB??
Is it all me? Do I make the 4 hour trip to the dealer to assure myself it's all me? Is there enough here (too much!!) for you to take a shot at the "problem"? If the answer is this is normal V3i performance, I'll be a little disappointed. I'd rather find out I'm an idiot and the problem can be fixed.
Sorry this is so long and hits on so many possible problems. I'm just trying not to keep moving toward those 500 hours. Thanks to anyone who can help. Dave
I live in central WA on the east side of the cascades. Here in the valley the soil is generally a rocky, sandy loam (maybe rocky, rocky loam). I'm waiting for the snow to finish melting and my ability to improve before hitting the mountain sites I've been researching. Phase has been very consistent at -93, and the strength usually runs about 4.5%. Signal is always under 10% (3 to 4 the most common) and noise is only 1 to 4 percent. EMI? I suspect not much! The only site I found that actually demonstrates EMI is the set up video by EMS. His EMI expands his spectrograph bars way to the right, and he says that no correction is necessary. (steady hum, not pulsating) When I find EMI (I often do) it's usually just a "wobbling" noise with no expansion of the bars, and in the lower frequencies. If the bars do expand, it's usually just a small amount to the left. If I stand there holding the pinpoint trigger, the volume will start to "ratchet up".I don't know if any of this is significant? My understanding is no harm, no foul. As long as the detector is (in my view) stable enough, the wobble in the threshold has no direct affect on performance? (Possible "masking" aside)
The problem: I can't get the V3i to perform any better than the 5900 DP SL that I awoke from it's ten year retirement.
In the test garden: the 5900 in DISCRIMINATION mode can ID a penny, dime and quarter at 4", and a quarter at 6". The 6" penny and dime are giving me noise, but nothing on the meter. It does nothing on the 8" coins. IN SAT I get a pretty loud responses on all of the 6" coins, and something out of the 8" quarter and penny. If in a very clean site, I'd dig the 8" responses. The 8" dime would be hard to recognize from normal ground irregularity. Coins on the open ground will hit 6/7" and MAYBE 7 to 8" in pinpoint.
Most of the standard V3i (stock 10" 2D coil) programs (C&J, Coin, Hi Trash) that use discrimination will perform very close to these same numbers! I can do a little better with the disc and the Hi Pro program. I was getting good sound and "reasonable VDIs" on 25% of my swings over the 6" dime and penny. Usually it comes down to good hits in one direction (moving around the target) and from one side. At 8", I'd have to swing for a long time to get a good sound out of the quarter, NO positive VDI numbers, and nothing at all out of the other 2 8" coins. If I switch Hi Pro to Mixed Mode, I can get FAINT AM hits on all of the 8" coins, but no VDIs of any kind.
Ground Balancing. There's a post out there by Low Boy in regards to GB (8/22/11 I think is the one), and finding the "best place" to balance. In trashy parks, finding a clean place can take a lot of walking around. Looking back at the Set up video by EMS, the video shows a ground PP of 13", I have never come close to touching that. In my yard, and in the park sites, I usually PP the clean ground at 6 to 7 inches. That's the best I can do. So I PP and start detecting. But as I learn how VERY CRITICAL this GB seems to be, I'm wondering if I ever really get a good GB??
Is it all me? Do I make the 4 hour trip to the dealer to assure myself it's all me? Is there enough here (too much!!) for you to take a shot at the "problem"? If the answer is this is normal V3i performance, I'll be a little disappointed. I'd rather find out I'm an idiot and the problem can be fixed.
Sorry this is so long and hits on so many possible problems. I'm just trying not to keep moving toward those 500 hours. Thanks to anyone who can help. Dave