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Chet

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  1. 开元通宝 ! 唐朝钱币 Kaiyuan Tongbao! Tang Dynasty coins
  2. It does not change the inductance. It acts as an active fixed circuit capacitance that reduces outside variable capacitances caused by changes in height and conductivity of the soil as the coil moves over it. If the shield is too close to the windings it can add considerable capacitance to the circuit which lowers the frequency response and response to smaller nuggets. I try to space it around 0.25 inches with a graphite resistance of around 100 ohms per inch. I have seen some Minelab coils be as low as 50 ohms per inch. If you go that low I recommend a long thin unpainted gap to prevent a circular short circuit. The gap should start top center, across, down, back across the bottom to center. On size; I shield the entire coil. Large coils could be shielded around the winding areas with satisfactory results. Metallic conductive spray paints can be a problem and should not be used for metal detector shields.
  3. I also have one of the early 10” X-coils which I also heated and wrapped for tighter turns. Later I opened the plastic housing up with the intent to replace the cable. It was not practical if not impossible. I recommend replacing it with a new cable. Making the splice midway between the coil and the curly part of the cable. Use marine grade (has hot glue inside) shrink tubing over each splice and over the entire area. Phrunt put me onto this source for cables. I have ordered both the GPZ 7000 and the GPX 6000 cables. I will let you know the quality when they arrive. Applicable to metal detector: gpz7000 sdc2300 gold monster 1000 (aliexpress.com)
  4. Over the years I have repaired several coils with dried out masking tape and a couple of dried out carbon sponges. I will relate on of my experiences with one coil while detecting in a new undisturbed gully. Detected and dug a few square nails then the detector goes crazy making all kinds of noise. With more than 60 years of electronics experience I know how to fix most problems. Turn it off and back on; several cycles later go to plan B; tap it gently; after banging it into rocks and trees; give up and have lunch on a big flat rock. Since we car pool going home early isn’t an option. From the previous scientific diagnostic testing (remember the banging of the coil test) it was determined that the problem was inside of the coil. Probably getting revenge for allowing myself and it to slide and crash into a gully the previous week. And there is no spare coil available; it’s time for another plan. A Pulse Induction Mono coil is a simple three wire circuit inside of a sealed waterproof plastic shell. So simple even that MacGyver TV guy could handle this. Have you ever seen someone whetstone their prize Buck Knife until they can shave with it. Well it’s that time to put it to work. Working on my leg-top workbench I peeled off the tape that holds the skid plate to the coil housing. Then with my razor sharp Buck Knife cut and pried through the sealed plastic seam around the perimeter of the coil. Spliced the broken shield wire and secured it with a piece of the skid plate tape. Closed it up and secured it with the remaining tape. At this point I realized that I hadn’t stabbed my leg or cut a single finger! Now for the test; turned it on and it purred like a kitten; went about 10ft and got a soft nice sounding target. Dug down about 10” and came up with a beautiful 13.8 dwt / 21.5 grams nugget! Some days it's just written in the stars.
  5. Yes, the other end is embeded into the graphite paint. Better than painters tape LOL.
  6. Yes, this was a factory defect. Yes, the GPX 6000 screen wire is wired differently. It is carried on separate/isolated wire within the coil cable and terminated on the printed circuit board within the control box. The standard GPX 5000 Mono coil uses a single coax cable with a single transmit/receive wire inside a braided coax shield. Inside the coil housing the graphite coil shield drain wire is soldered to the braided coax shield. Most GPX 5000 Double D coils use two coax cables one for a D shaped transmit/receive coil, the other for a D shaped receive coil with a single wire inside each braided coax shield. The transmit coax shield is required since the GPX 5000 uses the transmit coil as an additional receive coil when a Double D coil is used in Mono or Cancel modes. Inside the coil housing the graphite coil shield drain wire is normally soldered to the receiver braided coax shield. In some incidents this drain wire to coax shield connection is done with a jumper wire inside the five pin cable connector. In summation the GPX 6000 graphite coil shielding requires an isolated ground/drain wire. Standard GPX 5000 coils cannot be easily adapted to the GPX 6000 because the ground/drain wire is internally connected to a cable coax shield. Also the GPX 6000 appears to be finicky if the shielding, inductance, capacitance and resistance of the coils are not just right. Attached photo shows the drain wire after I heated up the plastic and pulled out the loose end. Inside the coil housing I can see where it was broken from the graphite shield.
  7. Not for us coil winders.lol But you are right for standard available coils.
  8. I think I found the problem with the GPX 6000 not working well with the 5000 and 7000 coils. The 6000 14” DD receiver coil measures 300uH, 4.0 ohms. The other 5000 DD and 7000 DOD receiver coils measure more than 400uH and much higher resistances. This indicates that the GPX 6000 DD coil has fewer receiver coil wire turns than the other DD coils. The GPX 6000 GeoSense function/operation probably needs close to 300uH for both mono and DD modes.
  9. Thank you this source will help a lot on some of my projects.
  10. The chip is embedded in epoxy so I am worried about damaging it with heat and/or tools to remove it. I don't want to sacrifice another coil if I mess-up. And additional coil cable for additional coils is hard to come by.
  11. If you look closely at the photo with the green toothpick; the bare wire that is looped back into the white plastic goop is the shield/ground wire. It should have been connected to the graphite shield inside the coil housing. They may have had a new employee or some accident in assembly of the coil? It resulted in a noisy and ground sensitive coil.
  12. If you do, outside with lots of fresh air. lol Attached are some photos;
  13. The cable and chip module that I salvaged is from a used GPX 17”x13” coil. The graphite coil shielding has a separate ground/drain wire. I haven’t been able to use it with a standard GPX 5000 coil because the ground/drain wire is internally connected to the mono cable coax shield. Also the GPX 6000 appears to be finicky if the inductance, capacitance and resistance are not just right. I don’t know if the 11” ID chip would signal the control box to expect some different coil specifications. A few days ago I salvaged the cable and module from a defective GPX 6000 14” Double D coil. I have wired it up to a standard 5 pin connector to adapt to the X-Coil connectors. I also rewired a ML GPX 5000 Commander 11” DD coil to the same pin connections as the X-Coils. In testing there are no coil faults and it appears to be working. But with both a GPZ 14 coil and the modified 11” DD coil there is very low sensitivity. I will do some troubleshooting to find out what is wrong.
  14. Has anyone compared the depth capability of the Algoforce E1500 with the GPX 6000?
  15. The shielding may be required to reduce EMI emission for government compliance requirements. That is to reduce EMI into nearby devices such as a cell phone.
  16. A graphite cabinet or housing shield does not have to be grounded to act as an effective shield. Any electrical EMI energy will be absorbed and dissipated as miniscule heat. Early television sets emitted a lot of EMI. To meet government requirements wooden and plastic cabinets were either internally painted with conductive paint or lined with thin screening or thin tinfoil. Some shields were grounded to the chassis some were not. It appears that on the GPX 6000 they may have or maybe not intended to ground the graphite shield. The real test would be to compare one without the ground connection before and after the repair.
  17. When I was in high school I worked part time in a one man Radio and TV repair shop on the Oregon coast. One day a logger carried a TV in and immediately cursed out the shop owner for faulty work from a previous expensive repair several months earlier. The owner assured him that it would be put right. Then ask him what problems he was experiencing. He stated that it didn’t have any audio. I remembered that the previous repair was for no picture. The owner asks him to return in an hour and it would be ready to pick up. A couple of new audio amplifier vacuum tubes were replaced to correct the audio problem. And the customer went home with no bill for the audio repair. I asked the owner why he didn’t charge him for what was clearly unrelated to the previous repair. He stated that in a small community competing with other repair shops when a customer walks out on you, all of his friends walk out with him. Responsible dealers and manufacturers likewise take care of their customers.
  18. A Panasonic 10RP-BTGS10 Bone Conduction headset was purchased from eBay. They have the same volume as the previous bone conduction headset purchased. So it appears that bone conduction cannot overcome age related loss of hearing as well as the Avantree Torus Speakers.🤫
  19. Time constant/conductivity properties extracted from Minelab document below; Metal detectors may differentiate between different non-ferrous targets by measuring how well eddy currents flow in them. This is determined by a target’s “time constant,” but is often referred to as “conductivity”, which is not a suitable term as conductivity is not the only property of a target that determines its time constant. Two properties of a metal target determine its time constant. One property is called the target inductance. This inductance may be thought of as the effective “mass” of the eddy currents, and which is basically the size of the eddy current path. Thus, for a given eddy current flow, the bigger the effective target inductance, the bigger the “momentum” of the eddy currents. Another property is called target “conductivity,” which is a measure of how easy it is for eddy currents to flow. This is the opposite of electrical resistance. High conductivity (low resistance) means the eddy currents flow easily (low current “friction”). Low conductivity (high resistance) means high eddy current “friction.” The better the target conducts electricity and the bigger the inductance, the longer the time constant. That is, a high eddy current momentum with a small slowing resistance, like a heavy vehicle with low friction, takes a long time to stop. Conversely, the poorer the target conducts electricity and the smaller the inductance, the shorter the time constant. That is, a low eddy current momentum with the resistive “brakes” hard on, like a light vehicle with high friction, takes only a short time to stop. Time constants vary very considerably between targets. Small bits of aluminum foil have very short time constants whereas, for example, gold ingots have a much longer time constant. Here is a table of targets of increasing time constants (from short to long): small bits of aluminum foil fine jewelry chains small old Roman coins US dime (small 10c coin) solid US civil war bronze belt buckle solid Bronze Age axe head large gold ingot large thick copper or aluminum plate Gold nuggets cover a very large range of time constants, from very short to longish. However, it should be noted that even large gold nuggets mostly produce relatively short time constants compared to similar sized man-made metal targets of high conductivity, because of the way gold nuggets are formed; they have many voids and impurities which significantly reduce conductivity and inductance. The magnetic properties of ferrous targets cause them to have a high inductance. This is because the magnetic field created by the eddy currents is made stronger by the magnetic property of the ferrous targets. In effect, this “amplified” magnetic field makes the inductance of the target higher. So, even though most ferrous targets may have poor electrical conductivity, they usually have long time constants because of their high inductance. Only pieces of steel or iron that have almost completely rusted through, or extremely thin steel wire have short time constants 2 (e.g. highly rusty steel/iron flakes or very thin staples.) However, some mildly ferrous targets may also have short time constants, e.g. some mildly ferrous coins or weakly magnetic stainless steel, and some plated steel targets too. The most common discriminator setting is to discriminate against ferrous targets and the shortest time constant non-ferrous targets. Extracted from page 4 & 5 of the following Minelab document; http://www.minelab.com/__files/f/11043/METAL DETECTOR BASICS AND THEORY.pdf
  20. Did they indicate which coils were used to develope the chart?
  21. Were you able to open the text for these patents? I tried with no success.
  22. The phones have a rechargeable battery powered amplifier. With full volume they are acceptable. There may be a limit to how much volume can be achievable with bone conduction? On cold windy days I use the same receiver unit with over the ears headphones.
  23. I used two Avantree Saturn Pro aptX Low Latency transmitter/receiver units for years with my GPX 5000 with earbuds. I am currently using one as a receiver that pairs with my GPX 6000 with Bone conduction phones. It would be great if Avantree could combine the Avantree Saturn Pro apt Low Latency electronics into a set of bone conduction phones to eliminate the dangling cord and controls and the charging of an extra battery.
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