Know your detector

minelab_sovereign_gt

One of the more important things everyone needs to do to be a successful treasure hunter…

is to know the detector your using, know how to set it, know how to tweak it and understand what it’s telling you.

Before I start explaining what I mean let me say that anyone, using any detector, in any hunting condition can find good stuff. It’s just a matter of how long will you hunt and how many bad hunts will you need to endure before the good targets show up.

Knowing how to setup your detector is important, if you have a manual ground balance and can’t balance it well your not going to find as much or  hunt as deep as you could. Threshold, discrimination, gain, even the volume plays a roll in how effective the machine will be for any given condition. Get to know what each knob or button does to the way your detector reacts, and just when you feel you have it mastered play with the settings a bit more, you may be surprised what else you learn about your detector and how it reacts to a different setting.

Understanding what your detector is telling you, by the way no matter what you think or what someone tells you  your detector doesn’t lie to you, even when it’s confused about what’s under the coil there will still be subtle differences in the way it reacts to different targets. There will be a time when you can tell a pull tab from a gold ring , most of the time, just by the subtle difference.

Each detector type, brand, model, individual detector and each person swinging the detector is different. What works for one may or may not work for another.

OK so now you may ask “how do I get to know all this stuff about my detector? Do I read the instructions? Do I read a book about it? Do I watch a video? Talk with someone that metal detects? Search the net?”  The answer is Yes to all of them but the most important, no the only way your ever going to know your detector is to get out and use it, than use it some more. Experience has no shortcuts, that I know of anyway.

The more you know your detector the more stuff you find. It wont take too long before your hearing the whisper of a target below the coil that you didn’t hear before.

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9 Responses to “Know your detector”

  • Mark:

    Great article Dave! Thanks for posting it up…well thought out information in there.

  • Mark:

    Dave, I know you do a lot of beach hunting…what’s your favorite wet sand detector?

  • Dave:

    Thanks Mark

    Favorite on wet sand, hummm.
    If I had to pick only one I’d have to say a multi frequency Sov.
    Given a second choice might surprise allot of folks.
    Garrett Ace 250, I’ve found more gold with that than I have with my Sov, but my Sov. does get more hunting time.

  • Dave:

    I took the Ace out today, met friend that also had his Ace out there.
    We did OK for the time we actually hunted, LOL.
    He did hit on a toe ring with it.

  • Mark:

    Dave :

    I took the Ace out today, met friend that also had his Ace out there.
    We did OK for the time we actually hunted, LOL.
    He did hit on a toe ring with it.

    I tell ya, the ACE’s really helped launch the whole “bargain” detector market…’cause they work great! A good performing machine for a decent price. Great combo!

  • Carl Cladoff:

    Good observations and advice, Dave!
    Some people do well reading and applying the book knowledge, but I have to agree with you on ‘the doing’. There’s no way around time on the detector…so many variations of sound…can only improve on auditory I.D.ing by concentrating, listening, and digging repetitively to make the necessary associations.

  • Dave:

    I just thought of another facet of this topic I neglected to mention, but you guys made me think of it now.
    Expectations.
    One complaint I read more than any other is “I just got this new, better, detector and I didn’t find anything…or I can’t stabilize it and all I find it junk.
    One thing I can say for sure is; if your in the hobby to make money, well your in the wrong hobby!
    Sure there’s always the story of the one that found the high dollar whatsit but the stories where the folks found enough to buy another set of batteries is still not always what happens and the ones that do are usually the one that logs many hours with the same detector..they got to know it.

  • Mark Gillespie:

    Very good info.

  • TOM R:

    Just recived my new fisher f5, retired my faithful Fisher 1236 x2 after many years of use (will use for back up). Just wanted something that will go a little deeper, (10 feet) no just kidding. Been using Fisher detectors for 30 years (not kidding). They work great.

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