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mn90403

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Posts posted by mn90403

  1. Great gold I'd say.  More than I've found in several trips up there.

    Last year Lucky showed us some spots up there and I got a lesson on my 7000.  Before that I've been up there with my 5000 but ...

    I'll be up there this time next week for about 3 days.  I hope to hookup with someone that can put me in some still productive areas.  I know it is 'everywhere' but also long stretches in between.

    Mitchel

     

    • Like 1
  2. dgatelyDP,

    I've yet to meet Steve but I've taken some lessons from Lunk.  I'm told that one thing they have in common is that they both don't use headphones.

    That being said ... using only the speaker on your remote for the 7000 or the 3030 will let you tolerate different settings than you may be able to with a high volume blasting in your ears.

    I use headphones with a volume control and one has noise cancel.  One set has a battery power boost and the other does not.  The signal that I amplify from the detector I use can sometimes accommodate different settings other than just the volumes.

    As Steve says, test, test, test so that you can hear anything out of the ordinary.

  3. We had a couple of 7000s in Nome last summer when I was just learning it.  I would say that the bigger learning 'curve' was Alaska itself.  We had some tailing piles and a couple of push areas and some tiny bedrock GB2 nuggets.

    Swifty got more nuggets (6?) than I did but I got a specimen that was about 12 g (5g gold) which was all that I metal detected in 3 days.  I was using the standard settings but we didn't have a ferrite ring at the time.  

    We had a GB Pro with us but it couldn't be tuned to get the bedrock nuggets by people who had their GB2 with them.

    If you are not working a push or tailings the tundra was so thick you don't know what you have.

    Only Steve knows!

    Mitchel

  4. dxb,

    I think Fred is right again.  METAL DETECTING is not for everyone.

    You have to enjoy a bit of a walkabout while at the same time paying some attention to geologic details so that you can get lucky.  There can be long hours between finds that make you wonder why you are doing this metal detecting thing at all.  You have to remain positive and THAT is the reason the 7000 might be the first detector you buy.

    Show up at a couple of gold club meetings or gold shops and use a detector a few hours first.  Most shops will have something you can use for a day for under a hundred bucks.  Go out with them BEFORE you buy the 7000 and if possible go to the dealer who will sell you a 7000.

    Those of us who own a 7000 know we are finding gold we could not find with any other detector.  That is what keeps us positive now for several reasons.

    One reason is that we can go to previously worked gold patches and still find gold that has been missed.  We all need rewards to keep us going back.

    A second reason is that it is an easy detector to use.  Most of us used other detectors before the 7000 and we think that the machine out of the box will find gold with the best of our GPX, GB Pro and any other PI detector's settings.  (We can then push it a little harder.)

    The third reason is that you don't want to go behind a good 7000 user with any other detector (other than a 2300 for small stuff) than another 7000.  What I'm saying is that a 7000 doesn't find everything and you have to grid an area completely but once done it would probably be better to look in another location/patch if the ground has not been moved.

    You said you have prospected and price is not a problem.  Get a 7000 with a warranty because there have been some issues that have required Minelab to replace the units.

    Mitchel

    • Like 5
  5. I found an MIT ring tonight and have already located the owner!  I messaged him but his tweets let me know it has to be him because his name is inside.

    This ring was down about 9" and I was using the 11 because I can swing it without a hip stick.  I had an SE Pro for a couple of years and had no problem and also the 3030 without a harness.

    When I got the 17 it was just a couple of months before I got tennis elbow.  Using the 17 does increase jewelry production as Rob said.  The 'problem' sometimes can be that the targets are very deep.  I've had to give up on several because I've had the wrong digging tool at the time.

    Mitchel

    • Like 1
  6. 5 hours ago, RedDirtDigger said:

    Re scales, I don't worry too much about weighing the super small nuggets, but if you buy a Zed, the  scales I recommend you should buy to keep in the car are  5 kg kitchen scales. There's nothing worse then sitting in camp for days trying to guess the weight of a slug or specimen you found that is too big for your 200 gram scales.

    cheers RDD

    PS. Zed owners should also buy a crowbar and keep it in the car.

    RDD,

    I would like to share your experience on a regular basis.  This area I am going has not produced anything more than a 5 grammer in years!

    Yesterday I got to the field at 3 AM for some cool night swinging.  I got 3 little nuggets before dawn and 4 more before 10 AM for a total of 7 for 1.14g.  I was ready for a new record and then it ended.  For the next 9 hours I was without a find of any size.

    The heat and sun gave me a bad attitude.  It's time to go to ...

    AUSTRALIA!

    Mitchel

  7. I have gotten a new scale and wow ... smaller than I expected.

    When I measure the smallest one in the picture it wobbled between .02~.03g.  The 10 smallest nuggets about total to only .8g.  I found even less gold than what I thought :sad: (2.14g total 12 nuggets) for the trip.

    I've gotta go other places now.

    Mitchel

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