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mn90403

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  1. Why should we expect a 'maxed out' detector to be smooth? Change the way you use it or use it at the normal or conservative settings. All of my Minelabs give me this choice. SE Pro, 3030, 7000, 2300, etc ... Friends of mine that are good with GB2s get them modded. It is a circuit board 'fix.' They also tell me that anyone who is not an expert with a normal GB2 should not and in some cases will not get modded. As to the coil bumping issue ... have Miner John make a 'nerf' coil cover so that when you scrap or bump it the 'bump' is not heard. Maybe this would also fix the grounding noise. I put one of the lexan plates under my 19" coil (mounted on picture hangers) and it has eliminated this noise because the coil can no longer touch the ground! Mitchel
  2. So, that was the Ganes Creek that I missed. I had a call for a cancelled opening or an added week in 2012? I wasn't 'ready' and thought I would go another year but didn't. I read about the landing strip. Mitchel
  3. June 2017 News from the UCLA Meteorite Gallery One of a series of monthly letters sent to visitors to the UCLA Meteorite Gallery and to others who requested to be on the mailing list. The Meteorite Gallery (Geology room 3697) is open with a docent present every Sunday from 1 until 4 with the exception of the last two Sundays in the calendar year. And it is open every work day from 9 until 4 but without a docent. It is not open Saturdays. We remind you that our website address is: http://www.meteorites.ucla.edu/. There you can find a map of our corner of the UCLA campus and instructions for parking in structure 2. At 2:30 on Sunday Jun 25 the speaker at our Gallery Event is Dr. Frank Kyte. The former manager of the UCLA electron microprobe and winner of the Barringer Prize of the Meteoritical Society for his research on the use of elements like iridium to trace the presence of impact deposits in sediments. His topic is "Eltanin, the largest meteorite of which intact fragments are preserved". Summary: The largest recovered meteorite was discovered in the Eltanin region at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean about 1500 km west of the southern tip of South America. It has been documented by sediment cores collected during a series of German oceanographic cruises. About 2.5 million years ago a one-kilometer-diameter asteroid impacted the ocean and deposited more than one kilogram of meteorites per square meter over thousands of square kilometers. About 90% of this was melted by the shock of the impact, but 10% is undamaged meteorite fragments. The lecture is in Geology 3656, just 40 yards west of the UCLA Meteorite Gallery. Our next Gallery Lecture will occur on Sunday July 16. The speaker is UCLA Professor David Paige. He will speak on "Ice deposits at the poles of the Moon and Mercury". Surficial ice evaporates relatively quickly if exposed to sunlight in the inner solar system. However, some parts of craters near the poles of Mercury and the Earth's Moon are in permanent shadow. If a water molecule lands in such a spot it is expected to stay there until evaporated due to heat from a micrometeorite or a photon from a star other than the Sun. New spacecraft data support the interpretation that there is ice in these shadowed regions. Reminder: You can find the UCLA Meteorite Gallery on Social Media. Please like us on Facebook ( https://www.facebook.com/UCLAMeteorites ) and follow us on Twitter (@UCLAMeteorites) and Instagram (uclameteorites). JTW UCLA Meteorite Collection Geology Building, Room 3697 565 Charles Young Drive East Los Angeles, CA 90095
  4. When I come to Australia I want to stay a few nights in Bendigo. I don't know any of the other places, yet. haha
  5. Nice one ... It could have been a sunbaker? I'd say if the weather is good keep on swinging. We have 110-115F in our gold fields now. It is time for beach detecting! Mitchel PS ... was reading about Bathurst the other day. Are nuggets still available around there?
  6. Rege, Steve has mentioned shape of the target as being important. I have to agree. It is not just a 'size' thing but shape. I mostly use a 3030 (It has a graph.) on the beach these days but in the past I used an SE Pro which is also multi frequency and a White's 6000 DI Pro Coinmaster. (It's meter shows probable coins.) Now I sometimes use the Gold Bug Pro (It just has numbers.) to find a few coins in the desert. With all of these detectors size matters and I always say a man made shape matters most in what I hear. One problem on the beaches now is the corroded zinc penny. It can crackle back at you showing multiple target signals. It can sound or look like a penny or other objects. Copper wire or copper strips can look like quarters or higher silver. Another problem on the beach would be chains. They have multiple facets and disperse a signal to a point that it is not heard back by the coil. When I used to use my 5000 on the beach (a PI) I have a find story about finding a fine chain with a diamond while digging a coin. I later put the chain on the ground by itself and could not see it with the detector. I found the jewelry by accident. When I do to the beach any more I don't have the energy (sore shoulder) or time to dig everything. (If you have a PI you dig it deep and you dig it all.) Iron tones, bobby pins and other trash on the 3030 are on the bottom of the graph. I'm so confident of it most of the time I don't dig. It is the same way with the top left for bottle caps. You just know what it is without digging it. Good luck with your use. Mitchel
  7. What Paul didn't tell us it that they are letting Norvic 'borrow' the control unit. It is on Norvic to make sure it gets back to them and not 'back' to the states! (Why do I always think of things like this when it comes to Paul?) haha Mitchel
  8. WTG Paul! You may have found more gold with the monster than any human alive because you didn't have your 7000.
  9. Steve, I think Paul and Norvic are dogged by the locals and he has told Paul any gold he finds has to be attributed to his next location! If we just assume all locations are confidential we might get more pictures. Hell, send us some pictures of other peoples gold. We won't know the truth or fiction. Mitchel
  10. Bunk is a great guy and an equally good detectorist. If you were ever to make it to the states and you needed a 'guide' for some Arizona locations then you should consider Bunk.
  11. Maybe someone can have Bunk check in to this forum. Several people here would have his contact info. I just messaged Frank C to have him get on here and fill the orders! Mitchel http://www.bunksarizonaprospecting.com/Pick.html
  12. I bought two of these picks from Bunk. One I left on his claim and never saw it again (small one) and another I 'lost' then 'found' then gave it away to the finder. I'll get another one one day but right now I have several picks. As was mentioned, the scoop works great. You can lift the dirt out of the hole and place it on the side and your hole won't fill back in until you are ready. That is a big plus. The pick I use now is a Leland pick with a much smaller head on a long handle that lets me dig without bending over very much. It is also a long distance from the Zed coil because I can't put it on a belt and don't want to but if you use two hands for the Zed ... you have to put the pick down and use it for a reference point. Not everyone's style but that is what I do now. Mitchel
  13. Thanks. How is that Monster working out for you in those trashy spots?
  14. Chuck, The shaft is not too long. Your arms are too long! (As they say in basketball, you have 'length.') Mitchel
  15. Ok, it is not the kind of flakes you normally think of when you think CALIFORNIA. We had a 'cold snap' in the west the last 3 days and that gave me a chance to go out and detect the hot deserts of Southern California. The cold snap came after a Wednesday fishing trip. It started off slow for the white sea bass and the yellowtail. We didn't get any so we went after the rock fish in deep water. This was my first trip of the year and it was a lot of fun. I went over my limit (10) but there were others on the boat that got my extras. At the end of the day we were near the island and managed to get our version of a barracuda and another fisherman got a white sea bass. So I left out for a 3 hour drive to our most productive nugget patch. Last summer we were working it pretty hard and found most of it but Swifty has been finding new patches so we went back. My last 4 trips had resulted in skunks. I was beginning to question my technique and settings. I was finding shots, lead, wires and hot rocks but NO GOLD. My headphones were sounding scratchy and losing the signal when trying to pinpoint. I bought a new set of headphones to make me feel better. (Superlux HD668B Dynamic Semi-Open Headphones) These were recommended on my other post about 'What Can You Hear?.' Now I know what I can hear! I heard all of the same trash but the sound was smoother than my worn out headphones. They were also comfortable (until the very end of the day). So I'm going along with the normal signals and a bit 'long in the tooth' attitude and I heard another hot rock. Even the 7000 and the 2300 find hot rocks in this field. Sometime in the late morning a hot rock was not. It was the rough flake nugget. I saw it in my scoop and could barely see any gold as it was covered in caliche. After a bath in my mouth I knew it was a skunk breaker. I also knew it was thin so I logged it in to my findpoints as .5g. It is really .82g. Friday I had gotten to the field at 4:00 AM and it was a full moon. Sunrise was 6 AM but you could see around 5:30 AM. Sunday's trip was similar but I got there at 5:00 AM and the wind was blowing about 25 mph and the temperature was under 50F. I was cold and went back into the car for a nap. Once the sun was up about an hour I got out and braved the wind until about 2:30 PM. Along the way I found the second corn flake that is 'smaller' but weighs more at .92g. It is a lot of work having fun sometimes but someone has to do it, right?
  16. Well done and well hunted. That weather has been amazing this year. Full dam and water over the spillway. I want some nuggets from there again. Mitchel
  17. Fred, You have a deep patch or two and you don't want anyone to use this coil on it before you. It was one of the reasons why I HAD to buy it. Mitchel
  18. Aussieau, Thank you very much for the photo. It is nice to know it is still there. Hunting in areas where it is possible to end up with a Large nugget excites me more than anything else. Why do I need to go to an area that has only sub grammers? I guess you could say there are some bigger ones there ... ok ... SHOW ME. haha I don't have to find the big ones ... I just have to hunt sometimes in an area where the big ones are or were. I'll let luck take it course (in addition to superior equipment, knowledge and understanding).
  19. Fred Mason has a story in the new ICMJ. Check it out at your local news stands or get a subscription from Chris Ralph. Let me just tell you that Fred has a picture of a nugget that covers a half-dollar coin. You can see some of the pictures here: https://www.icmj.com/ Mitchel
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