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Reg Wilson

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Posts posted by Reg Wilson

  1. Just keep your 'cotton picking' drone out of my spots. At about the two minute mark I can clearly see where I worked four different patches, one in the company of JR Beatty, which yielded over a hundred bits. 

    The land owners were on percentage

    All of that lower country is private property, and if an eagle doesn't get your drone a 12 gauge just might. (just kidding)

    Fence jumpers not welcome.

    • Haha 4
  2. I guess I'm just lucky with detectors as my 6000 is working just fine, although it did take a couple of outings to christen it with three small colours. I can't recall having problems with any Minelab detector from the GS15000 onwards other than when I was testing prototypes. Prototype testing is essential for sorting out bugs, and manufacturers should undertake rigorous field testing before any machine is introduced to the buying public.

    When I was testing the Australian built QED pulse induction detector the early versions were quite impressive, however the builder decided to produce a new model and put it on the market without testing. When I did finally receive the new machine it had more bugs than a Bangkok dormitory. The builder refused to accept that his baby was flawed and after a less that pleasant exchange we parted company. What could have been a good performing detector at a very competitive price turned out to be something less.

    Thorough testing is imperative for avoiding product dissatisfaction.

    • Like 9
  3. A mate and I were detecting Beggary hill when the boys found this slug down by the fence where there were a lot of old tins. It was just off a surfaced area.

    The kid that found it was Adam Turner (not Yerner as printed in the paper). His dad was a friend with whom I drank 'moonshine' rum at Wedderburn. Luke Turner had a prospecting shop in Wedderburn and had loaned a detector to the kids for a school project on gold prospecting.

    I dropped in one night with a large bottle of Coke for a rum sip when Luke said to me "I've something to show you". He unwrapped the slug from a pillow case. It weighed about 85ozs with a bit of ironstone in it. A nice lump.

    Problems arose when the parents of the two other kids got greedy and involved lawyers because it seemed that they did not trust Luke to sell the nugget, which was stupid because Luke had the contacts to get an above spot price for the nugget. Gold brings out the worst in some people.

    The end result was a forced sale where the best price was not obtained and the lawyers ended up with most of the money.

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  4. Gerry in Idaho, Funny you should mention Pieter Heydelaar. I spent a bit of time with Pieter in Western Australia. It would have been around the turn of the century when he and Debbie joined John Hider Smith, the late Jim Stewart, James Beatty and me around a campfire out in the bush. I was lucky to be in the company of some of the best detector operators that ever swung a coil. John's first trip to WA yielded him over 400 ozs, and I worked with him for a number of years.

    Pieter of course is an absolute legend who has detected world wide, and I have a photo of him holding a fuel cell from a Russian satellite that came to earth in WA. 

    My 7000 paid for its self in a couple of weeks and I found a few virgin patches with it, but only one 'real' nugget (27.7ozs) and while it was a brilliant machine, it was just too heavy, and I could never come to terms with the hip (cripple) stick. The 19" coil was a joke, the weight being ridiculous, and after swinging it for a while my busted wrist (motorcycle accident) just put me in a world of pain. James Beatty and I almost went down the road of cutting it up and rebuilding in a lighter form, but I chickened out in the end and I sold it rather than risk frying it if we got the wiring wrong. I'm still tempted to get another and try it. With an Xcoil it could be something else. James is good with electronics, so one day it may eventuate.

    When I realize that I have something big in the bottom of a hole, my first instinct is to look about to be sure that I have not been observed. I was once, and it led to my patch being moonlighted.

    With Covid lock downs I have not found a lot with the 6000, but like it a lot. I use the Quest Mate Wireless system rather than the Bluetooth audio, and when linked to Bose noise cancelling ear buds it is my weapon of choice. I have very little EMI issues using this set up except for the odd occasion when lying the machine on its side while locating target.

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 1
  5. This village was created by transporting old buildings from the gold rush era and locating them on the edge of a major shallow lead where the Eaglehawk lead meets the Porcupine lead. Nearby is the old dredge that worked the Porcupine lead. 

    The village is very authentic in that the buildings are original even though they have been moved here. A wonderful film set.

    • Like 4
  6. Good grief!!! It's all gone to hell in a hand basket here. Got to Queensland to see an old mate awaiting serious surgery with plans to go on to Darwin in the Northern Territory. Covid Delta variety has escaped and run amuck within a few days, forcing Jannine and myself to make a run through two borders, abandoning our plans to continue north. We got permits to cross borders just before a full lock down.

    The only positive is that I got to check some 'leg wetting' ground that I would love to prospect with my good buddy and geo wizard JR. Some serious research required mate.

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  7. These days I am very reluctant to show off finds. Some years back a mate of mine showed some serious gold to a female he was trying to impress. (I purposely avoided calling her a lady) This woman had some nasty acquaintances who paid my friend a visit at his secluded farm house armed with shotguns. To prove they were serious, they blew a hole in the wall above his head. Gold gone. Now I only ever show photos after the gold has been sold, as I too was robbed of about six ounces a couple of years ago.

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  8. Got a collection of broken ends in the shed. I even have a couple that I have repaired using epoxy and Kevlar. Split shafts bound with Nylon thread and soaked in epoxy. DetectEd lower shafts fit GPX and QED coils just fine. Minelab locknuts are rubbish. Most of the breakages occurred using Minelab prototypes with huge heavy coils. So heavy they used to bow the stems. Hence damaged shoulders, elbows and wrists.

     

  9. If consumers just happily gobble up poorly designed machinery without complaint, then that is what will proliferate. Sure the detectors in question have some desirable features, but that does not excuse the lazy aspect of much of the design. If a company has little or no competition it will tend to produce a product that is convenient for themselves rather than being ideal for the consumer, who, if they tend to fawn all over such offerings, simply encourage the manufacturer to continue a less than desirable practice.

    If the automobile industry behaved in the same way the Ford Edsell would still be in production.

    • Like 1
  10. I thought that Bi-polar was an unfortunate mental condition. Why use such a dodgy design in the first place? I saw some time back where a clever bloke stripped down an SDC and made a sensible ergonomic machine with much less weight.

    James Beatty and I contemplated doing a similar thing to my GPZ, but decided against it in case we did something wrong and fried an expensive detector. Sold it instead. 

    What is interesting is that when I changed detectors my gold recovery did not suffer but remained static, due partly to the fact that a machine with much better ergonomics, faster signal response and way less weight made it possible to detect longer with less fatigue. No more harness, and bungy cord. Freedom.

    • Like 2
  11. I sold the GPZ because is was overweight and overpriced, and just a bit over hyped. The electronics were pretty good after the bugs were sorted out, but just lazy design. Instead of a light weight prospectors tool, we copped a converted military monster with not much more than a colour change. Then to add insult to injury we were informed that to operate it properly it was advised that one had to use both hands (cripple stick) like a line trimmer, and go 'low and slow' ( due to very slow target response). Not my idea of a user friendly detector.

    The SDC2300 was another example of lazy design, and once more a colour change from military green to blue. Dodgy battery contacts, laughable headphone jack, ridiculous 'knuckle' coil arrangement and limited to small targets as it was originally designed to find tiny wiring in ceramic mines. Even if you could put a large coil on the thing its depth on large targets would be poor due to the fact that its internals were designed for small bits of metal.

    Coiltek have a test site just out of Maryborough in Central Victoria with a number of simulated nuggets of various size and depth. The SDC could barely pick up the smallest target only, whereas the QED could pick them all up. (witnessed)

    The next time you are in Victoria Jonathon bring your SDC and a pocket full of hundreds, and we'll visit the test site for a comparison. Bring your ex prison guard mate with you as well. I'd love to take his money.

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