dogodog Posted September 27, 2020 Share Posted September 27, 2020 I finally got my old 11'' replaced. This new coil is working great and I couldn't be more happy. Thanks to Dilek all my problems have been resolved. Yesterday and today were the first times I have given it a good run. I decided to hunt a farm house yesterday. I usually think the finds are getting low. Well low and behold I was wrong. Yesterday was good and bad as posted on the coin and relic forum. Today was even better!! same farm plus a kids camp. In two hours at the farm I scored a 2 oz. sinker, a bunch of odd lead, 2 wheat pennies, a girl scout pin from the 60's and two fabulous 1952 and 1957 roosevelt dimes. Around 1:30pm I decided to hit the camp. In another two hours I scored $1.05 in clad (not much) and a very awesome 1810 to 1830's button. inscribed on the back is Treble gilt Standard colour. seems to be a british button. Most of the clad from the 60's and 70's were at 6 to 7 inches deep. this button was around 3''. I did dig a bunch of deep trash always looking for the gold rings. The only thing is the id numbers are a little off, they are a couple of points off, but that was an easy learn. I'm thinking the old coil was bad from day one and today just proved it. I can't wait to hit some more of my sites and see what I missed with the old coil. The MK has yet to let me down and has been a great machine in the short time that I have owned it. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GB_Amateur Posted September 28, 2020 Share Posted September 28, 2020 13 hours ago, dogodog said: In another two hours I scored $1.05 in clad (not much) and a very awesome 1810 to 1830's button. inscribed on the back is Treble gilt Standard colour. seems to be a british button. Most of the clad from the 60's and 70's were at 6 to 7 inches deep. this button was around 3''. This shows why depth is often misleading. We can come up with multiple hypotheses as to why, but in the end you don't know for sure until you dig. Double silver isn't even the highlight. That's when you know it's been a good hunt! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kac Posted September 29, 2020 Share Posted September 29, 2020 Anything left on the front of that button? Back looks like it is made the same way many of the military buttons where made from CT. Guessing mid 1800's? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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