rustedwoodsman
New member
Every time I head up into the campgrounds of the central Washington cascades, I tell myself "you can't find it if it isn't there", and every time I head home I ask myself "what am I doing wrong"?
I think it's there! Last year I found a mercury laying on the surface, and another about 2 inches deep in loose sand. In over 25 trips to the area, that's all I found, and no clad over 3 inches deep. A couple of weeks ago I was in the same area as the mercs, and I had only found 6 pennies in a few hours work. I walked over to the river so the dog could get a drink, looked down, and saw a round green object. It was a 1920 wheatie. As I was picking it up I saw another, this one was a 1919 (I think, it's a little crusty). In a half dozen trips this year, I still haven't dug anything over 3 inches. Since I spend so much time hunting in the cascades, I really want to figure these sites out.
My default program (10"DD) accepts all VDIs and assigns a zero tone for -95 to -8. I run mixed mode around the "outsides" of the present fire pits, but it gets too noisy as you get close to the pits, so I switch to discrimination. Rx is 10, Disc is 90, AM is 75, Filt is 7.5 high band and an RD of 65. I'm running correlate with a span of 35 and a wrap of -94.
Some yesterday samples: my default program and the ground tracking probe = VDI 0f -95, strength 35.+ to 36. When I ground balanced and measured again it actually increased to 37.5 - 38.5. As I dropped the Rx, the strength went down. At an Rx of 4 I hit a strength of 14.2 to 14.4. I restored my program to see what Disc would do. Dropping from 90 (36+) down to 30 took me to 31; not much of an improvement. Restored to my original settings and tested AM. No real change here either. Strength went from 35.+ at 75 to 33.5 at 35. (As you probably guessed, moving a few inches with the coil could cause small changes in the reading. I wasn't worried about absolutes, just relative changes.) Switching filters didn't move things either. Strength moved around between 35 and 31. In the end, if I were working off of the ground probe only, I would probably have changed my Rx to 5 or 6 (the general rule of "reduce strength to around 20%), and left everything else the same. But I also thought I'd try burying a coin to see what happens.
With a quarter off to the side of a 6 inch hole, I GBed my default program. I'd say 2 out of three hits were pretty good positives VDIs between 60 and 90, a few were good low 80 hits. The quarter pinpointed well with a 2.5 dominant at a depth of 5.75 inches. To bring this long story to an end, 5HZ produced little change, and I thought they weren't as clear or consistent. I lost the target at 10 and 12.5 HZ. I kept the 7.5 high band and lowered the Rx to 6; GBed - and lost the target. By this time I was anxious to get hunting, and frustrated with my results. I restored to my default setting (which saw the buried quarter the best), changed my RD to 80, and started hunting - slowly. I found 42 pieces of clad and 42 pounds of aluminum trash - none of it over 3 inches. And once again I went home wondering?????
Isn't stability the ultimate test? If I'm stable at 40% mineralization, am I really loosing anything by not reducing the mineralization to 20% or less?
As a PS: I actually ran smoother than "normal" yesterday. I never tried mixed mode. Stayed in discrimination and accept all VDIs for the entire day. I would have tried a best data version - maybe next time; same with the 4x6 coil. But "by the book", the 10"DD and correlate should have been the best??? Also, I never even looked at the sensitivity probe, is it something I could/should use in this situation? Am I confusing sensitivity probe noise with ground probe strength?
Any suggestions or comments would be appreciated. I don't know what else I can try. Thanks, Dave
I think it's there! Last year I found a mercury laying on the surface, and another about 2 inches deep in loose sand. In over 25 trips to the area, that's all I found, and no clad over 3 inches deep. A couple of weeks ago I was in the same area as the mercs, and I had only found 6 pennies in a few hours work. I walked over to the river so the dog could get a drink, looked down, and saw a round green object. It was a 1920 wheatie. As I was picking it up I saw another, this one was a 1919 (I think, it's a little crusty). In a half dozen trips this year, I still haven't dug anything over 3 inches. Since I spend so much time hunting in the cascades, I really want to figure these sites out.
My default program (10"DD) accepts all VDIs and assigns a zero tone for -95 to -8. I run mixed mode around the "outsides" of the present fire pits, but it gets too noisy as you get close to the pits, so I switch to discrimination. Rx is 10, Disc is 90, AM is 75, Filt is 7.5 high band and an RD of 65. I'm running correlate with a span of 35 and a wrap of -94.
Some yesterday samples: my default program and the ground tracking probe = VDI 0f -95, strength 35.+ to 36. When I ground balanced and measured again it actually increased to 37.5 - 38.5. As I dropped the Rx, the strength went down. At an Rx of 4 I hit a strength of 14.2 to 14.4. I restored my program to see what Disc would do. Dropping from 90 (36+) down to 30 took me to 31; not much of an improvement. Restored to my original settings and tested AM. No real change here either. Strength went from 35.+ at 75 to 33.5 at 35. (As you probably guessed, moving a few inches with the coil could cause small changes in the reading. I wasn't worried about absolutes, just relative changes.) Switching filters didn't move things either. Strength moved around between 35 and 31. In the end, if I were working off of the ground probe only, I would probably have changed my Rx to 5 or 6 (the general rule of "reduce strength to around 20%), and left everything else the same. But I also thought I'd try burying a coin to see what happens.
With a quarter off to the side of a 6 inch hole, I GBed my default program. I'd say 2 out of three hits were pretty good positives VDIs between 60 and 90, a few were good low 80 hits. The quarter pinpointed well with a 2.5 dominant at a depth of 5.75 inches. To bring this long story to an end, 5HZ produced little change, and I thought they weren't as clear or consistent. I lost the target at 10 and 12.5 HZ. I kept the 7.5 high band and lowered the Rx to 6; GBed - and lost the target. By this time I was anxious to get hunting, and frustrated with my results. I restored to my default setting (which saw the buried quarter the best), changed my RD to 80, and started hunting - slowly. I found 42 pieces of clad and 42 pounds of aluminum trash - none of it over 3 inches. And once again I went home wondering?????
Isn't stability the ultimate test? If I'm stable at 40% mineralization, am I really loosing anything by not reducing the mineralization to 20% or less?
As a PS: I actually ran smoother than "normal" yesterday. I never tried mixed mode. Stayed in discrimination and accept all VDIs for the entire day. I would have tried a best data version - maybe next time; same with the 4x6 coil. But "by the book", the 10"DD and correlate should have been the best??? Also, I never even looked at the sensitivity probe, is it something I could/should use in this situation? Am I confusing sensitivity probe noise with ground probe strength?
Any suggestions or comments would be appreciated. I don't know what else I can try. Thanks, Dave