steve herschbach
New member
Hi,
OK, this is a bench test. An air test if you will.
I have a 0.7 grain gold nugget I use to air test detectors. Not gram mind you, grain. 480 grains per Troy ounce. Very few metal detectors will pick it up at all, even if you roll it around on the coil. So an air test with it serves to indicate what detectors have at least the basic capability to be a prospecting detector. An MXT with a Shooter coil at Max Gain will barely signal on this nugget within 1/4" of the coil.
Same Shooter coil on the Vision. Prospecting Mode (22.5 kHz only), no tweaks except Max RX Gain. Threshold a bit ratty but no worse than MXT at Max Gain. I'm getting a good hit at 2" and whisper at 3".
Now let's engage the TX Boost, raising voltage to the coil from 10V to 30V. Now I'm getting a good hit at 3" and whisper at 4". That is a 50% increase on a tiny nugget by engaging TX Boost.
This is easily better than MXT performance and actually closer to what I'd expect from a GMT. Now ground conditions will certainly have an impact, but my local area south of Anchorage is blessed with low mineral ground - and lots of tiny gold. Standard practice is a GMT and Shooter coil at Max Gain, and rub that coil around in the dirt.
Note that this Shooter coil is several years old. It is not optimized for the Vision and yet handles Max RX Gain and TX Boost. There is still even some performance left on the table by way of All Metal and Disc Gain. Remember that TX Boost will significantly cut battery life, but for what I'm seeing packing a spare battery pack or two will be no problem. Also note that TX Boost applied in the wrong locations can do more harm than good. It is not magic.
I've done this with enough detectors over the years that I know one thing right now - this detector will hit well on small gold where I hunt. Other places with extreme ground conditions I am in no way vouching for but this detector can do well in my area.
Steve Herschbach
Steve's Mining Journal
OK, this is a bench test. An air test if you will.
I have a 0.7 grain gold nugget I use to air test detectors. Not gram mind you, grain. 480 grains per Troy ounce. Very few metal detectors will pick it up at all, even if you roll it around on the coil. So an air test with it serves to indicate what detectors have at least the basic capability to be a prospecting detector. An MXT with a Shooter coil at Max Gain will barely signal on this nugget within 1/4" of the coil.
Same Shooter coil on the Vision. Prospecting Mode (22.5 kHz only), no tweaks except Max RX Gain. Threshold a bit ratty but no worse than MXT at Max Gain. I'm getting a good hit at 2" and whisper at 3".
Now let's engage the TX Boost, raising voltage to the coil from 10V to 30V. Now I'm getting a good hit at 3" and whisper at 4". That is a 50% increase on a tiny nugget by engaging TX Boost.
This is easily better than MXT performance and actually closer to what I'd expect from a GMT. Now ground conditions will certainly have an impact, but my local area south of Anchorage is blessed with low mineral ground - and lots of tiny gold. Standard practice is a GMT and Shooter coil at Max Gain, and rub that coil around in the dirt.
Note that this Shooter coil is several years old. It is not optimized for the Vision and yet handles Max RX Gain and TX Boost. There is still even some performance left on the table by way of All Metal and Disc Gain. Remember that TX Boost will significantly cut battery life, but for what I'm seeing packing a spare battery pack or two will be no problem. Also note that TX Boost applied in the wrong locations can do more harm than good. It is not magic.
I've done this with enough detectors over the years that I know one thing right now - this detector will hit well on small gold where I hunt. Other places with extreme ground conditions I am in no way vouching for but this detector can do well in my area.
Steve Herschbach
Steve's Mining Journal