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Gold Catcher

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Posts posted by Gold Catcher

  1. 28 minutes ago, Gone Bush said:

    Having said that, being unable to have a usable threshold and hear a 0.1 surface nugget regardless of ground mineralisation is still unacceptable, especially in a $7350 machine.

    This is where my particular interest would be for the Axiom. I realize that I am in a very different situation than many because I have excellent machines to choose from, and I am just looking for a very particular application (finding gold in very hot ground where other PI's struggle). But I have to say that the GPZ/NF12 in general/difficult (my to-go settings in very thot ground) generally has a very stable threshold and a 0.1 g nugget on the surface would blow your headset of your ears. Now granted, not a fair comparison between these very different detectors (also from a price point!), but for me performance in difficult situations is all that matters. But these particular needs are certainly not what makes a detector great or not. I am sure the Axiom is an excellent detector and a welcomed competitor for ML, and it will make a very convincing case for a great all-round PI with a settings package that the 6000 is lacking (unfortunately).

    GC

  2. 1 hour ago, Gone Bush said:

    So, Axiom can provide a good threshold with good stability.
    However, any settings used to achieve this meant the 0.11 gram test nugget could not be heard.
    Sensitivity 4, Fine mode, medium speed, threshold I think 16 and the nugget can be heard.
    These settings give a very unstable threshold that had me digging hot spots one after the other.
    Also, bump the ground and threshold goes through the roof.

    Bummer. Stabilizing the threshold in "7-8 hot ground" and not hearing a surface 0.1 g nugget defeats the purpose. Looking forward to reading more reports as they come in. I have 0 experience with the Axiom and don't know if these settings were appropriate for the ground, but the clip is disturbing to say the least.

    GC

  3. All detectors have strengths and weaknesses. And it surely appears that the Axiom has particular strengths other detectors don't have. This would make it a great fit into my fleet, in particular thinking of the difficult grounds that I am often faced with. Keep those reports coming, Norvic. Steve already built a very convincing case, and I am that close to pull the trigger! This would open up so much more opportunities for me, and it might outperform the GPZ in situations where I need it the most. Who knows what the new GPZ will bring, but this might be a long way out. And waiting for years is not my forte. 🤠

    GC 

  4. 43 minutes ago, Norvic said:

    Thanks Phrunt, Au... I tell ya what, you show that a vid cam will get me more gold and I`m that fickle I`ll have one for sure. Nah we are not the same gen at all, I`m only a kid of 12 going on 100..... But be assured Garretts on a winner with the Axiom especially if you like having control with settings, it isn`t as vocal as the 6K on some deep scraps but it still gets them. I just had 3 rare cool Summer FNQ days out with my son on the Z , 11year old grandson on the 6K, myself on the Ax. No 1 spot to the son, no 2 spot to the grandson and I come in a crippled last way back in the field, not the Axs fault ..... they`d deliberately burnt me out with gentle prod strategy.......🤪

    Still no fair game for your son and grandson, Norvic. Yes they have the Z and the 6k and have younger bones, but you have all the experience in the gold fields that matters the most. I bet you can find more gold with a pin pointer than many others out there having fancy ML machines....Good luck out there and have fun with your new toy. And yes, your word counts. You are one of a few in an elite club who don't need any video evidence to be convincing 🙂

    GC

  5. 23 hours ago, Norvic said:

    tis a feature that if it works better than the Zs GB will open more country to us. Also note Garrett recommend operating with GB tracking off something all detectors operators can benefit from if their detectors have that capability even VLFs, since auto tracking come on the scene. Auto tracking still has a payoff you get for its convenience.

    This sounds interesting Norvic, looking forward to your reports. I thought you have it as easy as those guys in NZ with that mild soil 😉. Good to know that you will put the Axiom to a test with those screamers. Stick a little nugget to them and see if it can detect it. Only the Z in general/difficult can detect small gold that is stuck to severe hot rocks from all that I have tried, but talking about light weight....Here the Axiom could fill a real market niche, which for me would be worth the money.  And yes, manual GB is a huge plus. I so miss that on the 6000.

    GC

  6. 16 hours ago, blackjack said:

    Gold Catcher but it seems your only VLF is a GM 1000, a great switch and go machine, based on what others have said, but you could do better in my opinion which may have you look at VLF's differently.

    I have been using the GM and the GB2, with good success. Both excellent machines for their purpose without a doubt. The newer gen ML VLFs are fantastic choices with many options for successful hunting. But a VLF will always remain a VLF, with the principle caveats (and benfits) of this technology remaining. For my particular needs a PI or ZVT are the much better choices, at least for the most part. But in general diversity is key. Not one detector, or one tech, will fit all needs. But of course, this is also a budget question, as you are pointing out. I hope this helps.

    GC

  7. 31 minutes ago, phrunt said:

    find that photo of the girl on the beach with her Manticore funny, she's got it reduced down in size, she must detect walking along on her knees to need it that size on the beach.  Her coil cable is too neat for someone that just squished it down, its wrapped as if

    No, I am sure she just used it as a pinpointer for her 7000 that is not shown in the picture 😉

  8. I think the two (main) reasons why VLFs have done so well in the past are that (1) there was no PI technology around for comparison and (2) a lot more easy gold was still in the ground. Now, it's getting much more difficult to recover gold, a fact that requires some good depth performance in addition. With 50% more power output the Manticore holds promise in this aspect, hence this would be my choice over the Nox (if I had to choose a VLF....). I personally would use it mostly with a small coil though. But then again, why not the Axiom? 

    GC

  9. 5 hours ago, phrunt said:

    I'd never buy an SDC just for the purpose of the occasional creek detect, especially when the VLF's are just fine for it and come waterproof

    The point is, they are not. VLFs are no match for the SDC when it comes to shallow gold hunting in difficult soil. You've got to come here to the Motherlode, Phrunt, or to most parts of the CA desert for examples of gold-typical difficult soil conditions to understand this issue a bit better. I doubt that many places on earth have the ultra-mild soil you are having, so less experienced DP members should not be misled when reading the thread. VLFs do have severe limitations in most gold bearing areas (unless in NZ), this is why the SDC was designed and why it has been so successful ("PI-GB2"). I don't say they are entirely useless, and especially with very small coils (GM5, Nox 6) the performance can be reasonable. But not anywhere close to what VLFs can do in super mild ground.  In addition, discrimination hardly ever works and you will miss gold, unless the gold is literally touching you coil.

    8 hours ago, Steve Herschbach said:

    Yeah, same here. Pretty much PI all the way. I might use a Nox or maybe the Manticore if I get one, with 15" coils, to do some blue sky prospecting in the high Sierra Mother Lode country.

    Good point Steve. I see the opportunity to use the Manticore (or Nox) for surface scanning and to then perhaps follow up with PI later on. For super trashy areas this might be a good strategy, with the caveats of discrimination understood. But from that perspective, why not using the Axiom right away? Also, for the Manticore discrimination, I wonder what depth would be for the "cliff", where discrimination stops working altogether beyond hope. For the GM it is about anything great than 0.2 inch.

    GC

  10. 18 hours ago, phrunt said:

    The milder your gold area soil gets the more viable VLF's become, I am in rather mild soil, and then there is bedrock and creek detecting especially creeks that are nothing more than bedrock, VLF's are great, waterproof and all.,

    For VLFs the soil is the biggest factor. You're surely spoiled with the conditions you are having in New Zealand, as you are saying. However, In most parts of the other world gold bearing areas are extremely mineralized, which makes PIs the much better choice. For the general exploration trips I use my SDC (and digg it all), which is also less sensitive to hotrocks than the 6000. At times, I use the GM/5, but mostly only for bedrock scraping and crevice scouting. The GB2 has never delivered for me in heavy mineralized grounds and gold can very easily be missed That's why the SDC/MPF was developed in the first place, which I view as a "hot soil GB2", but with additional potential for somewhat better depth. If the Manticore will be a game changer in this regard we shall see. But I have my doubts, since a VLF will always remain in principle a VLF, does'nt matter how you pack it. However, for treasure hunting this machine will without a doubt be a delight.

    GC

  11. Good video. All were shallow surface targets though that the pinpointer easily picked up. It would be interesting to see the target IDs at some depth and how well this would work by comparison. I am personally not a relic/treasure hunter and don't care too much about discriminating metals, but I can see how this machine could be a real value addition for those who are into it. Amazing the plethora of settings and graphic displays. Makes my 6000 with virtually no settings to choose from look cheap....😉 Nice job ML!

    GC 

  12. 1 hour ago, Norvic said:

    GC, I think you have gold fever as bad as I have, after my years and finds, digging a 0.1g still excites, especially when it`s in a new area that has had no attention from our electronic gold rush nor any past rushes. I also must admit I went through a few years when I lost the fever, but one trip on a whim got it boiling again. 

    Exactly right, Norvic. I am the same way. Early in my detecting life someone once close to Jim Straight told me that Jim would get excited about every single nugget he found, didn't matter the size. That story has stayed in my mind ever since and has made a lasting impression on me, especially considering what gold he found over his career. A true gold prospector cherishes gold, no matter what.

    GC

  13. As always, it depends on individual perspectives. I kind of see it both ways. Improving what can be found on old patches, including opening up fields that are thus far difficult to detect (i.e. extensive hot rocks), but also trying to find new patches in unexplored areas (where no man has gone before). Re size, I am happy about all, and a 0.1 g nugget can make me as excited as much larger ones. After all, it is about finding gold, and I have not yet yawned about any nugget in my scoop. Gold is gold to me, small or large. But I am also not trying to pay bills with it. And I doubt that many really would be able to do so anyhow, despite of what they are hoping. At least not here in the US and by just doing metal detecting.

    GC 

  14. A better detector won't of course help with trash (assuming disc is out of question).  But perhaps identifying gold close to (or attached to) hot rocks is something a better processing algorithm could achieve. The pic below is an example of what I am describing, taking from a hunting trip yesterday. All super iron rich volcanic tuff. Gold is often stuck to them or is in very close proximity. Some guys were up here with me, one with a 6000 and one with a GB2. They were just laughing....

    01.thumb.jpg.5bf638e74e44de4c688ff3b895d33542.jpg

  15. I tend to agree with you Steve, but those areas I was describing also have a lot of trash, meaning not many people are detecting there due to the challenges with the ground. I suspect there is plenty of gold still there that is currently difficult to recover. But for most other areas I agree, and the Motherlode is a great example for that. However, I also think hunting gold where gold was found before remains a winning strategy, perhaps not the only one though.

    GC

  16. On 11/26/2022 at 9:43 AM, phrunt said:

    Just by flicking my GPZ into difficult I see a decent performance drop and that's without even introducing the bad soil, and that's how many have to run theirs because of their soil, if they could get "normal" performance in difficult ground that would be a big improvement.

    Better ground processing in difficult soil would allow for greater depth, without the gold actually being physically deeper than in normal soil. This is exactly where I believe technology can improve. I get your point that for mild soil this does not matter much, but in other parts of the world this would be a game changer. In many areas I have no choice but to hunt in general/difficult (volcanic tuff). Switching to HY in either normal or difficult would make the detector completely useless, even general/normal would not work. Here is where a lot of improvements can be done, so I completely agree with you. BTW, for those areas I don't even bother to take the 6000 or the SDC. Another reason why a high-end top line gold detector needs settings options (!), and I think the current GPZ strives a good balance by having just the right settings menu to choose from. What would make me not want to buy the GPZ8? A "smart" machine that would do the thinking for me, ala 6000, with only little settings options to choose from. I love the 6000, but it has serious limitations to a point where it is unusable, i.e. in the areas that I was describing, where literally every rock is a screamer (6/14 makes no difference). With all the greatness of the 6000, it kind of sucks to have a $6000 machine, and you can't adjust any settings to make it usable for these specific tough grounds. Half of the Mojave Desert is littered with volcanic hot rocks, and that is right where the gold bearing areas are. And I am not just saying areas with hot rocks here and there that you can kick away, I mean large areas with shallow and deep hot rocks and that's all there is. Go and take a swing with the 6k in these areas, and you know what I mean. Just for that reason, I would be very interested in the Axiom, had I not the GPZ that would come to my rescue (in general/difficult). However, the Axiom could even have an edge over the GPZ in those specific circumstances. I would love to make a head-to-head comparison to see which detector would recover better small gold that is stuck to serious hot rocks. That is how you find most of the gold there.

    GC

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