BrokeInBendigo
Full Member-
Posts
37 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Forums
Detector Prospector Magazine
Detector Database
Downloads
Everything posted by BrokeInBendigo
-
Chinese Detector Mash Up
BrokeInBendigo replied to phrunt's topic in Metal Detector Advice & Comparisons
China is capable of manufacturing extremely cheap and low quality products as well as products made to the absolute highest standards possible on this planet. You get what you pay for, just like anywhere else. -
Gpx-6000 1 Year Anniversary. Is It The King?
BrokeInBendigo replied to Gerry in Idaho's topic in Minelab Metal Detectors
It is serious bloody business. I got it in March 2020, right at the start. For months after, I couldn't walk up a flight of stairs without needing to stop for a breath. I'm not some super-fit athlete but I'm young and in good shape. Very humbling to get knocked about like that from a bug. -
Gold Price Expected To Rise Significantly Soon
BrokeInBendigo replied to Aureous's topic in Detector Prospector Forum
Unfortunately for us consumers, when oil goes up the price for fuel increases immediately, but when it falls, the fuel companies only verrrryyyy sllllooowwwyyy reduce the price at the pumps. Oh well, not much we can do about that. -
Jeff, Roughly 10 years ago, a major detector manufacturer suggested that they may be able to work with Howard (QED inventor) on the QED if he broke ties with a particularly unsociable character (Marshall Pardee aka Doug) over here in Victoria. Doug and Howard were and are vehemently, almost militantly anti-Minelab and, of course, open and unhinged bashing of your competitor can be a major problem when running a business in a small industry like prospecting/gold detector manufacturing. You don't see Nokta raging about Garrett online, that would not be a service to anyone. Howard refused to sacrifice his relationship with Doug and so nothing ever came of this potential offer. So there *was* an opportunity for the QED business to be managed by professionals, but it was rejected in favour of what appears to be a grudge. The representative from the major detector manufacturer posted about this on Finders forum, which for the sake of more sensitive readers here on DetectorProspector, I will not link.
-
New Life For The Gpz7000, Rohan To The Rescue
BrokeInBendigo replied to RoobyRoobyRoo's topic in Minelab Metal Detectors
DOD is the same configuration as the ML GPZ coils (and the NF, and a good portion of the X-Coils). Looks like this new coil from NF will be the same as the NF 12" in terms of windings. Just a different size and hopefully lightweight. -
New Life For The Gpz7000, Rohan To The Rescue
BrokeInBendigo replied to RoobyRoobyRoo's topic in Minelab Metal Detectors
I emailed Rohan for more detail, he said the size is closer to 18x13.5", and is bundle wound. -
I figured out how to make my GPX light as a feather the other day. Used a heavy 1.6m crowbar to dig for about an hour. GPX and my pick felt like nothing. I don’t think the GPX is too heavy unless I put a 25” coil on it. Even with a 19” it’s manageable without a bungie - and I’m not a large or very strong person. But I do use it almost daily for a few to several hours, and I’ve built up the muscles. Also I switch arms (right swings for 80% then takes a break with left for 20% of time). I suspect the main issue for people detecting for long periods of time is RSI - we can work up the muscle to swing but you can’t really do anything about RSI besides switching arms. After a day swinging a large coil I feel some non-muscular aching in my shoulder - I’ll have to be careful about that in the future. No comment on the GPZ though. Never swung one. Feels stupidly heavy, and a big coil must really screw up the weight distribution.
-
1) IS GPS NECESSARY/BENEFICIAL ON A PI UNIT? No. With all due respect to your engineers, there is no way you can make a better GPS than my garmin unit or mobile phone, without years and years of development and a very significant cost to customers. Please spend your time and money on making a great detector. Leave the gps to gps companies. 2) IS COLOR SCREEN MORE PREFERRED? ADVANTAGES / DISADVANTAGES Not necessary, I’d be 100% happy with black and white with a sensible UI. 3) ARE YOU OK WITH AN EXTERNAL CABLE AROUND THE SHAFT? As many others have said, we are all hoping to be able to use our GPX coils, which means external cables. Having external cables also seems to be simpler and less prone to issues. 4) COILS - SIZES AND SHAPES (3 PLEASE) please let us use GPX coils and then this is a non-issue. But, a small elliptical (10x5”), medium round (12”) and larger round (18”) would cover most situations. 5) IS 10 FT WATERPROOF GOOD ENOUGH? Absolutely. thanks NM, looking forward to your PI detector!
-
Gold In Outback West Australia
BrokeInBendigo replied to geof_junk's topic in Detector Prospector Forum
This guy is the real deal. Amazing series of videos on his channel, some prospecting secrets hinted at, and the process of small scale mining. -
In no typical video format will the audio be a higher bitrate than the video... https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_rate MP3 maxes out at 320kbps CBR for example - this is quality that is indistinguishable from lossless for 99.999% of listeners and audio playback setups. At 320kbps you have barely-useable video. 1080p h.264 is in the mbps range for video and the audio stream will be no more than 320kbps. Your video quality decreases when you add audio for two reasons. Firstly you are re-encoding the video when you add audio to it. Secondly you are adding data to the media stream from the audio and if you keep the same end bitrate (as is common in video editors where you set a quality profile), that leaves less bandwidth for the video. Metal detectors typically use only a relatively small frequency range is used for pitch (about 300 to 3000 Hz thereabouts), and the sample rate is quite low as well. With the advent of devices like arduino, teensy, etc it would be trivial to handle audio processing as described in this post. I think we’d need to talk to a designer of a modern metal detector to determine why the audio has been so similar across detectors for years. Odds are, it’s because people are conditioned to the classic metal detector sounds and if it changed substantially, productivity would decrease. In other words, this is a cultural limitation and not a technical one.
-
Huh? Audio bitrates are significantly lower than video. We have dedicated GPUs to handle video processing with their own RAM. Audio processors and DSPs have far fewer resources than video for a reason - audio is far simpler than video. Maybe I’m not understanding correctly but audio does not need more memory than video.
