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RED CLAY

unluckylester

New member
Does anyone have any tips on penetrating red clay? I am using garrett at gold. Seems i am only getting clad coins. This stuff is stickier than honey. It also turns all my coins red. I also can not get very deep. Any settings to get into the clay deeper. I can't be the only one suffering in red clay. Manually ground balance higher or lower? Anything at all will suffice.
Thanks,
Les
 
anywhere from 20 to 68 sometimes in the 70s.
 
i tried 20 below auto ground balance. today i will try 20 above and see what happens.
 
* With the AT Pro, learn and hunt in Pro mode. It is deeper then standard mode. With the AT Gold, the all metal mode is deeper then Disc 1 or Disc 2.

* Has a place been hunted out? Go back and try again after a good rain soaking. Moist wet soil gives better sensitivity and greater depth readings for targets.

* If you get a nice high audio and a VDI in the 70's or 80's, dig it.

* The larger the coil the deeper it goes. However, too many targets under a large coil can mask a good target. If you get a slight good audio using the large coil, lift it up 2-3 inches and center the coil where the good audio was. Often times the good target will be much clearer.

* Get a coil cover and scrub the ground. Some people scan the ground inches above it...."DON'T" You can gain a couple of inches scrubbing, which is significant.

* Don't swing too fast! Just because it has a very fast "recovery speed"......doesn't mean it can always pick out that one good silver coin amongst several pieces of junk. The electronics still need to process lots of information.

"SWING TOO FAST, YOU WILL COME IN LAST"

* Swinging too fast can make you a sloppy hunter. You also risk eventually cracking/breaking your coil and elephant ears from the constant banging on trees, playground equipment or concrete.

* If you are getting lots of EMI or increased mineralization which is causing erratic audio, try adjusting your discrimination first, before lowering the sensitivity. This sometimes lets the machine run smoother without losing any depth.

* If you get mixture of audio signals, scan the target from different directions. Sometimes a good target is beside or partially underneath a good target. The AT Series has a unique ability to pick out those good targets amongst the trash. Going at the target from different directions allows the AT Pro to perform even better!

* Ground balance your machine occasionally. Temperature can change, and directly affect the settings. Hunting in shade vs. sun can vary. "a 14 degree difference on a lawn area to a 35 degree difference on a parking lot." But, the mineralization can also change between areas....so again...ground balance periodically.

* To increase the depth/sensitivity to silver targets, lower the ground balanced numbers 10-20 points

* If you are hunting an area that is absolutely covered with nails, try ground balancing out a nail until it is nothing but a small amount of static. Now....all the copper & silver targets will give a loud audio response....BUT the target ID will be off.

* Build a test garden...use good & bad targets at different depths. You will soon discover that deep silver targets beyond depths of 8 or more inches begin to not sound off as a high pitch or that the VDI numbers remain in the 80's. That is very good information to know. My rule of thumb states if it's deep....it's old. Dig it! It costs you nothing

* Run your battery charges at the top 1/4 fully charged, not the last 1/4 charged battery condition segment. The AT Series will run 100% until the battery runs down to a certain point. Because nobody knows exactly where that point is on their machine, don't try and find out. With the price of cheap alkalines or rechargeable "AA" batteries, you should never reach that unknown power loss point. Bring spares, or top off your recharge ables before the hunt

* Read the manual and watch the videos. Garrett has posted many videos to help with problem areas such as pin-pointing, ground balancing, iron-audio, target id, target sizing. These are just a few. Go to the link for a complete view :

Click below on either for more information.......

http://www.garrett.com/hobbysite/hbby_at_pro_videos.aspx

http://www.garrett.com/hobbysite/hbby_at_gold_library_videos.aspx
 
Les I hunt in Georgia red clay the coins don't sink that deep it's possible the site has been cherry picked the deepest coin I've found in my area was a measured 11". But this spot had top soil brought in on it. If there's coins there the AT-Gold or AT-Pro will get them. I have dug silver dimes at 9" using the AT-Gold set up in disc 1 sensitivity one bar from wide open.
 
There are different kinds of red clay...I've heard of some areas that it is not that bad in...and some places that throw a whole kink in everything you know about detectors.

Such as shown in this video...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=frxqDw4W2OM

If your clay is the bad kind....it could be doing to your detector what they show in that video. You may very well be going over good targets...that normally would give a great signal and coorisponding VDI...but the dirt is so bad, the detector thinks they are iron. I've hunted in that area of VA before and it's so bad you have to run all metal all the time on a VLF machine...or better yet, just run a pulse machine. I've got the same stuff in my area of TN as well. Just food for thought.
 
Good point Daniel I didn't think about bad dirt minerals! Your right some red clays are hotter than others!
 
I`m a Georgia digger also with this type of soil being abundant. I have dug clad at multiple depths...any where from 2-12 inches deep, but what I am learning is to dig those iffy signals.....more often than not they tend to pay off. I started doing this out of curiosity and playing the "trash or treasure" game. I found that I missed some targets in previously hunted areas and I also started to find coins in holes with iron, wire, and other trash items. Sometimes pennies will hit hard, other times they are scratchy at best. If you get a good dime hit 2-6 and you don`t find something in the initial plug, it`s probably a deep aluminum can.....the signal is usually stronger than an actual dime too. My auto GB is usually 80-85 and I hunt with sens 1 bar below max. regardless of the mode. :drinking:
 
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