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fogrider

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Posts posted by fogrider

  1. Thanks for posting.

    Modern metal detectors are new to me. I last hunted in the early 1980s.

    Seems like all brands require the operator to learn their detector's "voice". 

    In my situation, my Nox 600 reads gold at 13-15, which is where pull tabs live. Canadian nickels sound almost exactly like certain bottle caps when operating in full mode, and only really shine at 4kHz. 

    I'm learning to hear the subtle differences in signals. The light iron "grunts" of some bottle caps, and the narrow chirpy "waaah" of a coin on edge.

    Cheers, and good hunting....

     

    • Like 2
  2. Took the Nox to a local 1937 community hall (with permission).

    Hit it Friday after work, and most of the day today. Ran it mostly on multi-frequency.

    The 10x5 worked well in the trashy conditions. So many bottle caps!

    Met the 80 year old 2nd generation pioneer that played ball there when he was a kid. He was a wealth of information. Nice guy. Their baseball team was called "The Pirogies" (They were Ukrainian!)

    Had a great day. The scenery and weather were fantastic.

    47 ML nickel, 43, 47 (x2), 53, 55, 57 dimes, and a 1935 1 cent:thumbnail_20221015_022712.thumb.jpg.98c90039329eac7604b140138758e636.jpg

    thumbnail_20221015_191126.thumb.jpg.76af8f83fa6704d71fe19240f72749a4.jpg

    thumbnail_20221015_191829.thumb.jpg.1ba7ad424b3421b03ffeb04cc0c75b6d.jpg

     

    There was a lot of action around the old concession window. I thanked the caretaker by trimming around the building.

    thumbnail_20221015_180030.thumb.jpg.4fb6c1b41542c54d2f7331bcd5b4bcda.jpg

    Happy hunting!

     

     

    • Like 6
  3. 1/2 hour hunt on an area of my backyard that I've hunted 3 times before. One men's ring and two pennies ('59 and '60).

    The 10x5 provides precise separation of close targets.

    A slow sweep, and careful attention to the audio signal help maximize the benefit of the coil.

    It seems to detect coins on-edge quite well; providing a slightly bouncy yet repeatable signal.

    I think the initials on the ring are FDH. A pioneer named Frederick Hoar homesteaded a 1/4 section 2 miles from my place, on July 7, 1928. Might be his ring.

    Nox 600, Park 1, 5 tones, 12, 20-40 discriminate, 4 kHz, 10x5 coil.

    Might head out to an old baseball diamond later today.

     

    thumbnail_20221010_133104.jpg

    • Like 7
  4. Nice finds. 

    On 9/18/2022 at 4:32 AM, jim tn said:

    A. 5 silver day including jewelry is getting rarer each passing year.

    On 9/18/2022 at 6:28 AM, NCtoad said:

    Permissions to private residences are hard to get and the public areas are pretty much hunted out.  Sometimes I’ll luck upon a place that hasn’t been hit hard, but it’s rare.  

    I count myself lucky. Most areas up here have never been hunted, or may have been hunted lightly in the past. Lots of old homesteads are still standing on their original 1/4 sections.

    So far, folks seem willing to give me permission to hunt when I ask nicely and explain my digging technique to them. I cut a small 3/4 hinged plug and place my dirt on a rag. They appreciate the courtesy.

    On 9/19/2022 at 6:28 PM, dogodog said:

    Nice to see you are thinking outside the box.

    Agreed.

     

    Happy hunting.....

    • Like 2
  5. 10 hours ago, jim tn said:

    I don't do anything with mine other then a water rinse when I get home.

    Good point. Some old silver coins with nice patina should be left "as-is". Just a rinse in clean water.

    If a silver coin was dropped while in uncirculated condition, I don't mind cleaning it with baking soda and water to remove the surface dirt. 

    However, polishing a silver coin with metal polish is "verboten" in my books.

    Happy hunting...

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