Greg (E.Tn)
Well-known member
Made a brief foray into my backyard w/ the above setup and was initially impressed w/ this setup.
Machine ground balanced easily, I was able to crank the sens up into the 90's w/ no interference or EMI, but backed it down to about 85. Detecting in BP, 2F tones, disc. set on 7.
Got a solid and very loud in the upper 60's, jumped a bit into the 70's. Didn't check the depth indicator, but figured it was a pretty shallow target because it hit so hard.
Dug through about 3" of topsoil into red clay subsoil and the target was still in the hole. Finally retrieved a clad dime at 10." I was sweeping the coil about 2" above the ground when I got the hit.
I'm not a coin hunter, but I was impressed with the solid, loud hit in red clay on such a small target, and the numbers were pretty solid.
I would estimate the coil would have hit the dime solid even deeper, maybe 3-4" deeper than it was, judging from the volume of the audio.
Machine ground balanced easily, I was able to crank the sens up into the 90's w/ no interference or EMI, but backed it down to about 85. Detecting in BP, 2F tones, disc. set on 7.
Got a solid and very loud in the upper 60's, jumped a bit into the 70's. Didn't check the depth indicator, but figured it was a pretty shallow target because it hit so hard.
Dug through about 3" of topsoil into red clay subsoil and the target was still in the hole. Finally retrieved a clad dime at 10." I was sweeping the coil about 2" above the ground when I got the hit.
I'm not a coin hunter, but I was impressed with the solid, loud hit in red clay on such a small target, and the numbers were pretty solid.
I would estimate the coil would have hit the dime solid even deeper, maybe 3-4" deeper than it was, judging from the volume of the audio.