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Mark Gillespie

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  1. I want to get this straight in my mind. You get a good repeatable signal and dig the target. Once the target is out of the hole you do a simple air test with the target and the machine is silent?
  2. The White's model is a good choice. It won't pick up the small bits and pieces of metal trash. Of course you looking for the large, deep targets. Keep us posted on your adventures.
  3. If this is true 10. Price. It will cost approximately 2100-2500 US dollars. New technologies cost money, yes, but they also bring an advantage over all other metal detectors. I won't bite, my TDI is more than sufficient at the moment. Water proof is good but my Equinox will do for water hunting. TDI for super bad ground Equinox everything else
  4. Fantastic hunt in my book. You did very good. It's nice to hear others state how solid the audio is with the Equinox on good targets. ?
  5. You have a very good point. Back in the day, I had a Vaquero and a Tejon. Both had fantastic audio capabilities. In fact, I did find a lot more gold rings than I tend to find now. But now, with all the high tech visual ID screens I find myself relying more on what it indicates, rather than a pure audio response and for sure I've walked right over rings thinking they might be junk. The Compadre is another fine machine for hunting for lost gold items in playgrounds. Partly contributed by the small coil and the unique audio.
  6. I sold the V3 to a guy to hunt his hunting arrows, of all things. Funny thing to want a detector for but he said the arrows were very expensive.
  7. I might try my hand and measuring the specific gravity of the metal too. \ https://www.mgsrefining.com/blog/2018/02/07/specific-gravity-testing-for-precious-metals-gems
  8. Small update: Hardness on the Rockwell C scale is 33. Not likely to be silver now. I'll check the ID again and post later today.
  9. Awesome find. You must have very mild dirt, where I live that penny would have been badly corroded. That coin didn't see much circulation, look at the Liberty, very plain.
  10. I had one of the first released Eurotek Pro's. Mine was an exceptional detector for the price. Wish I'd kept it, but a guy kept on and on until I sold it to him.
  11. I've got two updates: It is non-ferrous and the chief machinist where I work is going to check the metal with a hardness analyzer, what ever that is. Once I have a hardness value I'll be able to compare that to known metal hardness values. Just another bit of information. He has a complete machine shop at his home where he makes knives from steel. I'll update tomorrow.
  12. No clue what it could be. The weight is almost the same as a silver dollar. No pattern to recognize what it might be. To start with I thought it might be lead but it can't be cut by either a sharp knife or a razor. ?????????????????????
  13. I might add something that I fell for several years ago. Tom, down in Florida was promoting the Fisher F75 very heavily. Explaining how deep it could go, how fast it was and how much more could be found and I, before thinking had fallen for all the hype, well maybe not hype in Florida. Now I can say the F75 is a good machine, might go deeper, is faster and might find more but to the levels of Florida, NO. In the red/orange clay dirt of Virginia, it struggles just like any other of the VLF machines I've had in the past. I listened to the "you must run this machine hot" to get the depth but not in Virginia or for that matter anywhere the ground is high in minerals. But in the white sand, no minerals of Florida, YES.
  14. Try locating one of those low grunts and dig it up. If it's a very small piece of iron it could possibly be a very old home site.
  15. Wow, that is some awesome relics. History unearthed. Thanks for sharing.
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