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Lunk

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Posts posted by Lunk

  1. 56 minutes ago, Steve Herschbach said:

    My personal opinion is the GPZ 7000 set a high limit both for weight and price that will not be repeated. The tide has turned in the other direction on both counts. Equinox points the way to the new Minelab philosophy.

    Agreed Steve, and I'm convinced that Minelabs' next flagship gold detector will be lighter weight than the GPZ 7000.

  2. 1 hour ago, Steve Herschbach said:

    I found the comment interesting. A detector with exactly the same performance as a GPZ 7000 but exactly half the weight and with lighter coils would be worth more money to me. In other words set a new GPZ 7000 in front of me and another machine, same performance, less weight.... which would I pay more for? I’m going with lighter even if it costs more. Yet Mitchel implies other people would not feel the way I do about that so I’m curious what others think.

    There is true sales psychology here. White’s Electronics used to produce various versions of the same detector and the bigger, heavier ones cost more because bigger is better! :smile:

    I guess you could see it two different ways: on the one hand, the lighter weight alone could be perceived as added performance and would justify an increased price point. How well that would fly would depend on how many people would actually view it that way. The other perception that I think would be more common is that a lighter weight, equal performance detector Is not worth an increase in price because you’re paying more for less physical detector with no real technological performance advantage. Now if it was a lighter weight AND improved technology than the GPZ 7000 with X-coils, a higher price would be justified to most. And I don’t recall Minelab ever NOT improving their tech on each new flagship gold detector anyway, so I feel the lighter weight, same performance detector scenario is extremely unlikely. That's what I think. Of course, a lighter weight, improved performance detector at a LOWER price is what we all want, but that scenario has never happened with Minelab either; maybe they will make history this time? 

  3. 4 hours ago, Gerry in Idaho said:

    Show us a few of your ID pieces Lunk.

    These bits were found several years ago with the GP-3500, and are typical of what I dig up in my neck of the Idaho outback; nothing big or particularly impressive, but keepers nonetheless. The hand-stacked rocks and iron trash from the 1860's gold rush era clued me in to the gold.

    image.jpeg.b174ce312c84bb185b5b814f4bc1757c.jpeg

    image.thumb.jpeg.1863512ab9ea3f6dcddc2a6aa362f252.jpeg

    image.thumb.jpeg.6204a7258a8daa4481b508901b73f09f.jpeg

  4. 13 hours ago, kiwijw said:

    Don't suppose you have waved a Gold Monster or a Nox 800 with small coil over that area?

    I’ve actually used the Nox and the GM 1000 at this locale, both with their small coils. Must have just missed this particular spot before, as the speci was right on the surface. Happy Holidays to you.

     

    3 hours ago, GB_Amateur said:

    Did you use acid on it or did just water clean it up?

    As Geof noted, I didn’t want to use any kind of acid on the limonite, so I just used a gentle scrub with a toothbrush in soapy water.

  5. On my first trip to the desert southwest 20+ years ago armed with my trusty Fisher Gold Bug 2, I looked up a nugget shooter by the name of Glen “Griz” Anderson in the Arizona outback town of Quartzsite, who was gracious enough to take me out to an old nugget patch that he and some other locals had hammered. He said if I hunted it thoroughly that I should be able to turn up a bit or two. Sure enough, careful searching with the six-inch elliptical concentric coil of my GB2 did coax a couple of crumbs out of the old patch, but other than that I wasn’t having much luck. So I decided to be adventurous and started detecting up slope away from the patch, towards the crest of a small hill. That’s where I started encountering the bird shot pellets...LOTS of them. After recovering about a dozen of them, I dug what sounded just like another, but it turned out to be a very small bit of purple quartz laced with thin stringers of gold instead.🙂 It seemed nobody had bothered to detect this area for long because of all the bird shot,  but I stuck with it and for every dozen or so of the tiny lead pellets, I would find another bit of the beautiful purple quartz laced with gold, until I had a couple dozen pieces. I hunted the spot for a few days until it dried up, and I’ve been back again every time I have acquired a new detector over the intervening years, which has found me a few nuggets off of the patch, but never another bit of the purple quartz. So I was hoping to find more the other day with my White’s Goldmaster 24k, outfitted with the 6-inch round concentric coil. I was finding birdshot, but alas, no purple quartz and gold. As I pushed the coil under a very small palo verde tree, the 24k let out a healthy ZIP! declaring something definitely larger than a bird shot; I was fully expecting to see a 22 bullet or casing sitting on the surface, but could see nothing. So I raked a bit of the loose surface material into my nugget scoop, waved it over the coil and ZIP! got it! It turned out to be a small 4-gram speci with a limonite crystal, quartz crystals, and gold! I’ve never seen anything quite like it - a very unique piece.

    17E7EE8B-2A7A-4A27-BAF8-5C80FA978F9B.thumb.jpeg.74565e73b94421c42e38dccc9352737d.jpeg
     

    B8AE9372-FE6F-47CC-8A8E-611BC5996695.thumb.jpeg.0724df32ac4755801e0a40454025e2cf.jpeg

  6. On 11/24/2019 at 11:34 AM, kiwijw said:

    Thats awesome Lunk. Well done. Gosh....what an X coil would do over that ground may surprise you.

    Best of luck out there.

    JW 🤠

    JW, I’ll have to borrow a 10-inch X-coil next time I see someone swinging one and give it a go on an old patch or two.

  7. DigsAlot, I was running my updated settings the whole time; they work great in the dry soil conditions of the area. Yep, the skunk catches up with all of us sooner or later, but there is always a nugget or two waiting for your coil to pass over them, so better luck next time out.

  8. The weather in northern Nevada has been extraordinarily nice this past month, but it's due to deteriorate rapidly soon; time to head for the sunny warmness of the Arizona goldfields. During the last 3 weeks I've managed to scrounge up 43.4 grams (27.9 dwt) of the good stuff from old patches with the GPZ 7000 and stock 14" coil. Largest nugget weighs 7 grams (4.5 dwt) and the deepest bit was close to a foot and a half. 

    image.jpeg.b70a66a6839856df6bc388ca8279a7d3.jpeg

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