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Gold Hound

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Gold Hound last won the day on December 2 2016

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location:
    Australia
  • Interests:
    prospecting, Treasure hunting, fishing.
  • Gear In Use:
    GPZ 7000
    GPX 6000
    Equinox 800
    Rock crusher
    570 Polaris
    Ktm 350
    Landcruiser
    Pick n shovel
    Gold pan

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    Gold Hound Dale
  • YouTube
    Goldhounds nugget recovery

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  1. That rock is called polymictic conglomerate. Common in some places here to mate. The stuff here dose not carry gold like normal sandstone type conglomerate but it can be intruded by gold bearing veins. Not sure about your NZ stuff though if the water course that made the clasts was auriferous it will be. Ours pre-dates the gold mineralisation events so keep these options open when prospecting the area. That type of conglomerate is prone to brittle fracture which is highly favourable for gold vein intrusion. Also some types have clasts that are chemically favourable for gold precipitation. Good rock most of the time.
  2. On the 5k my two favourite coils are the nuggetfinder 15in spiral wound and the 20in spiral wound. I ran a 14in coil as my standard coil until the spiral wound mono came out. I found many kg of gold with it. I used the 20in anywhere the ground was over 400mm deep as you are not going to get small stuff at that depth anyway. And the sensitivity of the 20 is still pretty good on gram sized and up targets. On 20g+ sized targets the 20 gets way better depth than the 14 or smaller coils. I like Reg do not target small crumbs (unless electronic loaming) but take whatever comes, and believe me there is not much that gets past the 14 or 15 in the way of crumbs once you know how to use them. I wasted many hours going over areas that I cleaned with the 14 with smaller coils for SFA so abandoned that approach very early on. I always used the 14in coil if the depth of cover was shallower than 400mm as there was no advantage of using larger coils in shallow ground. But in deeper ground they have a distinctive advantage and I found many kg following this approach.
  3. Looks like a VLF setup to me. We use them to map conductive structures prior to drilling. They work particularly well in places like NZ or Canada where oxidation is low compared to Australia where oxidisation can be a problem. The oxide here can cause quite a bit of noise. We have had the most success with gradient array and high resolution magnetometer surveys.
  4. Pretty cool bone mate! I've prospected the same types of areas for years mate if you want some pointers to assist you pm me. There are some techniques I employ to increase my success working Jurassic sandstone, and ways to figure out what direction the channels are heading and certain sweet spots to detect.
  5. You mean the Frisky Fraulein and the trench footed yank... have you seen those feet Trent?
  6. That is total BS Sheppo, all of our videos were filmed and posted on YouTube after Bruce's murder it had nothing to do with it, and we have never had any other "incidents" as you say. Despite what people say we had written permission and lawful access rights for everywhere we prospected and filmed. We stopped posting videos because of the same problems that Jaysong has/had. The lengths people will go to to follow you are extraordinary! If they spent that much time looking for gold they might find something! I have a 3 terrabite hard drive full of video that no one will ever see due to the negative impact it inflicted on me.
  7. I really like Bill Southern. I like his attitude, he has good knowledge and approach to prospecting. He's a good detector operator too. I'd host him as a guest prospecting with me.
  8. I've prospected exactly where he is filming and stayed there many times oftern for months at a time since 2002. I can tell you it may well be the least mineralised productive goldfield in Australia, if its not it would be a close second... On the 5k my normal settings for the area were sens extra everything else max due to the fast time constant advantage of sens extra and the predominantly small gold in the area. It is very rare to get gold over 7g or a 1/4 oz on the Yankee scale. The NQ Explorer bloke is from far north Queensland which is about 2200km give or take or a good 2 days drive on nothing but empty freeways from FNQ which has many many good Goldfields within minutes or a few hours drive. This may along with past garrett false marketing hype on both the infinium and ATX that burnt many Australians may give you an idea on why many Australians may be sceptical. I myself maintain a positive outlook on it and am willing to give anything a chance, and then we have the fact that Gerry and Steve both had development input into it which gives me hope and confidence.
  9. Thanks for the detailed reply Steve, much appreciated. I'll heed your advice. Thank you for staying involved in detector development, I appreciate the effort and the benefits that we all receive from your involvement. Looks like a great detector I'm going to give it a try when the dealer I know gets one, that way I won't have to risk my money and possibly end up dissatisfied like I was with the ATX. It may not suit my needs but it certainly ticks a lot of boxes and is a major step in the right direction for garrett! And I believe that this will positivly flow on to other manufacturers aswell. Thanks mate!
  10. Just so you know Tibooburra has extremely low mineralisation compared to all other commonly prospected gold fields in Australia, its in high silica granite the soil is red which is deceiving. This is not a bash at garret though, I think that the nq Explorer bloke went there because of its reputation for prolific small gold. Last time I went there I averaged 7g per day over 2 months, its a pretty easy goldfield the gold is spread out all over the flats and there are heaps of dry blowing areas. The gold is generally small sub gram the biggest piece I've ever got there is only 53g. I've watched a lot of videos from the NQ Explorer he is a passionate detectorist but I wouldn't rate him highly in regards to prospecting ability, he is definitly no JP in that regard, I'd wait to see a better prospector use it. That being said I still think its a very interesting looking detector and can't wait to try one. I like how they gave you simple but I believe essential manual control, ml went to far into automaton and eliminated user control over basic essential settings, glad to see that garret obviously listened to Steve and Gerry in development which gives me confidence in risking my money to try it out, especially after my ATX dissapointment.
  11. Awesome! Thanks Steve. Looks like they finally listened and if your willing to put yourself out there and do the videos I'm guessing that it performs too. About time ML got some competition. Can't wait to try one for myself. Is the price point known yet?
  12. Are you planning on using it for gold or relics/treasure? Just one thing to consider if your using it for treasure, most treasure is small coin or up size, so sensitive coils can be a detriment as can be higher gain settings. I found the best combo was gb off or sharp if it was on in some places where the soil required it. And I would lower my gain so that I did not constantly pick up small surface junk targets. The opposite is required if you are going to use it for gold, high gain and I'd definitely run the spiral over the traditional bundle wound. Here in Australia I ran it over extremely mineralised ground for gold but the monoloop coils and timings still out performed except in extreme conditions.
  13. I used their standard bundle wound back around 2010 on the 4500 for treasure hunting in Europe, did well with it. I had to turn the ground Balance off as the soil was near zero mineralisation, it punched really deep and the discrimination worked as good as it dose on it.
  14. Hi Jasong Thanks for the patent info, I think there will be a very interesting release in the next year or so. I agree with your views on signal processing, I have always thought and even suggested to one of the minelab engineers that they need to employ digital noise cancelling filters that read the EMI and play back the inverse of the received emi signal and cancel it out much like they do to silence the sound on military helicopters aircraft ect. My uncle worked for Lockheed Martin as a mathematician/physicist electronic engineer and designed the flight control, weapon control and silencing algorithms that they still use today across a broad range of military vehicles, I've had a few conversations with him about the possibility of this and he says that it is easily achievable with modern processing and further stated that you can even use ai processing to make the machine learn as it goes to adapt to different adverse conditions and filter them out. We also started work on a detector that works on elemental resonant frequency to detect only desirable targets. We got promising results but much work is required to make it usable in the field. And it is not like a handheld metal detector its similar to IP/Resistivity servey equipment that we already employ in geophysical serveys over our tenements.
  15. I like his videos too, and I don't really watch many prospecting videos. He seems like a nice fellow I'd take him out on a trip if he ever came down under.
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