OregonMike said:
Just wondering...since White's worked on my detector it's remarkably stable at high Rx Gain numbers. For example, I can run Hi-Pro at 14.
Mike, glad to hear they got that issue taken care of. White's is tops in customer service!
OregonMike said:
My question is, should I?
Is there any reason or advantage to using lower gains when higher ones are available?
I often base my final decision for Sensitivity and RX Gain settings on the model in hand, the existing ground and area EMI conditions, and just how deep I might realistically need or want to detect.
I really enjoy my VX3, and I especially enjoyed the XLT's that it replaced. With both the XLT and the VX3, I use the same basic approach to set-up as I do on my #1 favorite manual control analog White's, the XL Pro. How do they compare? Simple.
The XL Pro's primary Sensitivity level was set at maximum internally by design, slightly higher than the former big guy, the 6000 Di Pro SL. So with the XL Pro I only need to adjust the Signal Balance which is the same function, but different name, as Pre-Amp Gain on the XLT or RX Gain on the Spectra series. On the XL Pro, I almost always set it just as high as possible, just slightly stable but close to 'the fringe" of noisy operation.
With the XLT I first set the the AC (motion Disc.) Sensitivity as high as tolerable (usually '75') first, then I increase the Pre-Amp Gain as high as possible, just like the Signal Balance on the XL Pro, to be close to, but just a touch below the point of instability. This provides me with better depth, cleaner and louder target responses from the deeper and/or smaller targets, and also lets me reduce the required sweep speed.
The XL Pro is a great analog detector, and the XLT is a really good 'blend' of analog and digital design. Then, we have the Spectra series.
These very digital designed models work a little differently in many ways, and it took me a while to adapt to the differences in response and sweep speed and mastering what it takes to enjoy them. I'm getting there, and really like my VX3, but set-up is similar. I make sure I adjust the Disc. Sensitivity first to be reasonably high w/o noise and chatter. If everything is nice and stable then I can hunt away, with the next 'Sensitivity' setting being the RX Gain. I run it up, a little at a time, just to the point where the detector behaves itself and isn't a chatter box. That provides me with depth and performance.
So the question, is there a good reason to use a lower RX Gain setting than a higher one? Yes, for some people and some applications.
Maybe if the site only has shallower targets and depth isn't necessary.
Perhaps if the ground is really nasty (and as you know, we can run into that at times here in Oregon), then we might do a little better with a little reduction.
Also, if a site is heavily littered with a lot of closely-spaced targets. More often than not I grab my MXT Pro w/6