Downdeep said:
I have that coil. Do you think it would pick up the bullets at a foot in that ground? I know it hasn't picked up a quarter at a foot in my yard.
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Hello Derek.
It's been a busy week on the domestic work front here, but I've downed tools and having a peek at the forum.
Do you really expect an answer to the quoted text? .....You Do?.....Then a simple reply is sufficient......."Not a snowball in hells' chance"
I know you are a good detectorist and sensible about the principles involved...( I do read your posts)......
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Now, have you given any thought to the benefits of ANY smaller sized search he\d than the stock 10" DD ?
Remember, we were offering thoughts for the lousy ground you experienced, where a coin was barely detectable at 3 inches.
The SHOOTER would have ripped that out with ease...and some to spare.
DEPTH is not the goal in on such a site, but rather REDUCING GROUND EFFECT and NON-FERROUS TARGET DEGRADATION BY ADJACENT FERROUS TRASH.
THE SHOOTER WILL DO THAT.....and in the better ground, located the larger calibre bullets to very respectable depths, dependent on target size, attitude and shape.
The fact that the site is vast...600 acres.....is not the problem under discussion.
10 inch diameter or 6 inch diameter.....if the bigger coil is so overwhelmed by the ground, then you are probably wasting 70% of you time and 80% of your energy chasing iron?
Some of the other replies indicate to me that the writers didn't comprehend the words that were written.
i.e.
Find a productive area, and using the small coil, work it to death.......Simple, and even corroborated by one reader...LittleJohn.....
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As Bob suggested, lets leave that one in your capable hands to sort out.
Went out today with my V3 and the Shooter, just to remind myself of the sheer joy of its ease of use and power when applied in a demanding environment.
It was a wooded dale with a small meandering stream littered with decades of minute trash etc.
As kids we would see who could jump the gaps without falling on our rses and then having to walk home seven miles soaking wet.
A favorite, quiet location away from the maddening crowds. A playground from the past.
Two hours of peace, in the flickering sunlight of early Spring.
[attachment 193369 dell1.jpg] [attachment 193370 dell2.jpg]