earthmansurfer
Active member
I've seen people mention the correlation in the title before and Moonshine mentioned it the other day. So, I played with it, moving between manual 30 sensitivity and a neutral auto (25 or so) on a lot of targets. Here is the first target I played with. It was just a pull tab at 5" or 6" but that is not the point - I get the same reaction on coins.
A higher sensitivity does indeed cause the Fe numbers to be more bouncy (in particular on an open quick mask screen) for a variety of reasons. There are two I can think of and that make sense in my ground:
1. - I have iron mineralized ground and running the sensitivity higher just picks up more of the iron mineralization, thereby "distorting" the Fe number. I guess it's averaging or picking up the target along with the ground.
2. - There is a fair amount of deeper iron in my ground. You can run the E-Trac totally quiet with no iron nulls in auto neutral, most of the time. But move it to manual 30 and the nulling starts. Again, there must be some kind of averaging happening.
And maybe 3. - Perhaps running the machine hot just makes the machine less stable (as is with most machines). Fe numbers are more bouncy but the CO numbers are not any where as impacted.
Also, there is a difference when you run some discrimination at high sensitivity compared to an open quick mask screen with the same high sensitivity. It appears that running some discrimination decreases the Fe bounce, but I am not sure here. Chime in with your experiences and ideas. I think with discrimination the E-Trac filters out some of the iron (via trash density high? I should test this. and gives a more stable Fe number. Just a thought.)
Now, I think it is dangerous to simply say "Drop the sensitivity to get the Fe numbers more solid." Well, yes, that is true but you will lose depth. If you don't get nulling from deep iron it's because you aren't picking it up, so if there are any coins at that depth you might not pick them up either (depending on size, conductivity, masking, etc.) I have tested this on coins in the 7" - 9" range in my soil and it is quite clear that once the sensitivity drops in the 20 to 24 range (in my soil) depth is greatly impacted. Remember, there is some kind of boost process at sensitivity 25. You can observe this quite clearly by switching between 24 and 25.
So, my suggestion is to know your soil and ground iron content. From there you have to decide if there are coins at fringe depths. How important is a quiet hunt to you? Play with the sensitivity settings. Unless you have high ground mineralization (or the like), you won't get the "brights in the fog" problem, but you have to test that out.
As I've said before, I don't have but just over 100 hours on the E-Trac, so I am still learning it big time. So, jump in here with your ideas, suggestions and corrections
Enjoy,
Albert
ps - Click on "youtube" in the lower right of the video and watch it there at 480 (have to choose that at the bottom).
[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiz5g85KpaI[/video]
A higher sensitivity does indeed cause the Fe numbers to be more bouncy (in particular on an open quick mask screen) for a variety of reasons. There are two I can think of and that make sense in my ground:
1. - I have iron mineralized ground and running the sensitivity higher just picks up more of the iron mineralization, thereby "distorting" the Fe number. I guess it's averaging or picking up the target along with the ground.
2. - There is a fair amount of deeper iron in my ground. You can run the E-Trac totally quiet with no iron nulls in auto neutral, most of the time. But move it to manual 30 and the nulling starts. Again, there must be some kind of averaging happening.
And maybe 3. - Perhaps running the machine hot just makes the machine less stable (as is with most machines). Fe numbers are more bouncy but the CO numbers are not any where as impacted.
Also, there is a difference when you run some discrimination at high sensitivity compared to an open quick mask screen with the same high sensitivity. It appears that running some discrimination decreases the Fe bounce, but I am not sure here. Chime in with your experiences and ideas. I think with discrimination the E-Trac filters out some of the iron (via trash density high? I should test this. and gives a more stable Fe number. Just a thought.)
Now, I think it is dangerous to simply say "Drop the sensitivity to get the Fe numbers more solid." Well, yes, that is true but you will lose depth. If you don't get nulling from deep iron it's because you aren't picking it up, so if there are any coins at that depth you might not pick them up either (depending on size, conductivity, masking, etc.) I have tested this on coins in the 7" - 9" range in my soil and it is quite clear that once the sensitivity drops in the 20 to 24 range (in my soil) depth is greatly impacted. Remember, there is some kind of boost process at sensitivity 25. You can observe this quite clearly by switching between 24 and 25.
So, my suggestion is to know your soil and ground iron content. From there you have to decide if there are coins at fringe depths. How important is a quiet hunt to you? Play with the sensitivity settings. Unless you have high ground mineralization (or the like), you won't get the "brights in the fog" problem, but you have to test that out.
As I've said before, I don't have but just over 100 hours on the E-Trac, so I am still learning it big time. So, jump in here with your ideas, suggestions and corrections

Enjoy,
Albert
ps - Click on "youtube" in the lower right of the video and watch it there at 480 (have to choose that at the bottom).
[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiz5g85KpaI[/video]