Monkeys Uncle
Well-known member
Been detecting 8 yrs. Started with a cheap Bounty Hunter. Moved up ($ wise) to an AT Pro, then to an ETRAC and now a Vanquish 440. Detected good and bad targets with all of them. Best find ever was a $6 grand diamond ring...BUT, that find was made on the surface, in bright light with the naked eye. Would not have discovered most of the other finds without a detector though.
After 8 yrs and 4 machines (simple & complex) with upgrades in technology over time, my thoughts on the subject are the more bells/whistles in terms of how much one can "fine tune/tweak" his/her machine...the more frustration one will encounter. It will become a constantly nagging matter of "how much" discrimination does one use??, which is the "better (more conclusive) signal"...ferrous or conductive??, how high (or low) should I set the gain??, which tone or pitch (if you can even tell) is really silver and not clad?? I could continue the list...but, I think you get the idea.
Right or wrong...I've become convinced of two things. They are:
1.) A multitude of "bells/whistles" CAN improve one's abilities/opportunities to dig treasure, BUT it;
2.) Will or can also heighten one's likelihood of missing treasure due to the "wrong" settings for the location/target/depth/moisture/orientation. etc., etc., ETC, ad infinitum!!
My point is...the more choices one has...the more chances of "getting it wrong" AND the more one will begin to "doubt" those choices AND ultimately, his/her "machine's actual capabilities". I say this because I've watched several videos where the user demonstrates that given certain settings, the detector can totally ignores a target, and after toggling thru various settings...the machine finally indicates a target was present all along. WHO wants to continually make adjustments...guessing every time what the BEST settings are...WHEN we're not even aware that we unknowingly just "walked over" a good target?? That consideration IS the definition of frustration in my mind.
As for me...I've moved to settling for:
a.) the "latest technology" +
b.) "a Mfg. reputation for quality", and every bit as important TO ME,
c.) "simplicity".
I've decided to trust in the mfg's engineer, who IS an expert in their field and LAST...realize the machine that "GETS IT RIGHT" every time in every condition for every kind of treasure...HASN'T BEEN BUILT and probably never will.
X-Ray vision might get us there.
HH, good luck and stay well!
After 8 yrs and 4 machines (simple & complex) with upgrades in technology over time, my thoughts on the subject are the more bells/whistles in terms of how much one can "fine tune/tweak" his/her machine...the more frustration one will encounter. It will become a constantly nagging matter of "how much" discrimination does one use??, which is the "better (more conclusive) signal"...ferrous or conductive??, how high (or low) should I set the gain??, which tone or pitch (if you can even tell) is really silver and not clad?? I could continue the list...but, I think you get the idea.
Right or wrong...I've become convinced of two things. They are:
1.) A multitude of "bells/whistles" CAN improve one's abilities/opportunities to dig treasure, BUT it;
2.) Will or can also heighten one's likelihood of missing treasure due to the "wrong" settings for the location/target/depth/moisture/orientation. etc., etc., ETC, ad infinitum!!
My point is...the more choices one has...the more chances of "getting it wrong" AND the more one will begin to "doubt" those choices AND ultimately, his/her "machine's actual capabilities". I say this because I've watched several videos where the user demonstrates that given certain settings, the detector can totally ignores a target, and after toggling thru various settings...the machine finally indicates a target was present all along. WHO wants to continually make adjustments...guessing every time what the BEST settings are...WHEN we're not even aware that we unknowingly just "walked over" a good target?? That consideration IS the definition of frustration in my mind.
As for me...I've moved to settling for:
a.) the "latest technology" +
b.) "a Mfg. reputation for quality", and every bit as important TO ME,
c.) "simplicity".
I've decided to trust in the mfg's engineer, who IS an expert in their field and LAST...realize the machine that "GETS IT RIGHT" every time in every condition for every kind of treasure...HASN'T BEEN BUILT and probably never will.
X-Ray vision might get us there.