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fogrider

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Posts posted by fogrider

  1. I'm not aware of any RAF training site in my area, but that makes sense. I live in Northern Alberta. Perhaps someone was visiting from one of the 4 RAF training schools in Alberta during WW2. My farm was homesteaded in 1930.

    The lettering on the second button is legible. I just read that these buttons were made by a company called Cheney in Birmingham UK.

    Some had a compass hidden inside. There were two compass designs. Early ones had a 4-star compass with a right-hand thread back, later ones had a 4-hole type compass with a left-hand thread back (to fool the Germans, who had discovered the earlier design). These two buttons ar regular types, without a compass.

    Needless to say, I'll search this area again. It's full of farm litter, so detecting is slow and tedious.

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  2. Went to an old homesite last night. I just stepped out of the car, snapped some pictures of a forest fire across the Peace River and was getting my detecting gear out of the car.

    I looked to my left and there was this fresh elk shed lying on an old rock pile in the ditch. Clean as a whistle, all points intact, with no chew marks.

    Now I need to go looking for it's partner.....

     

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  3. Found this Canadian '47 ML quarter about 60 feet from my house, in an area near the old bbq pit where folks tossed their garbage back in the day.

    It rang up as a 12-45 in one direction and 11-40 in the other direction. It was surrounded by bits of junk metal. I was running in "all metal" mode.

    I missed it last Fall with a Nox 600, but the CTX sniffed it out this time around.

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  4. 11 hours ago, Rick N. MI said:

    Nice finds. I like the old Canadian coins and designs. I find a few in northern Michigan. I've got some Canadian LC's. They come out of the ground in mint condition.

    I agree. The Canadian Large cents had a bit more tin and less zinc than the small cent coins. They're a bit more like bronze, and tend to develop a nice green or light brown patina in the ground.

  5. Took my new/used CTX out for its first hunt. This was a 1935 site I hit hard last Fall with a Nox 600.

    I was impressed with how the CTX rooted out coins-on-edge and those buried amongst the trash.

    '16 dime, '46 dime, '44 quarter, and 21 pennies.

    The '46 dime completed my collection of Canadian silver dimes from '38 to '68.

    I used the "User" button to cycle between the factory "coin" program (50 tones) and a custom program (5 tones, combined). The soil was wet, full of bottle caps and iron bits. Auto Sensitivity (+3) reduced the number of false signals. Response: "Normal".  Target Separation: "Ferrous/coin".

    I didn't find the CTX's weight overly taxing on my old body. If anything, it encouraged me to slow my swing-rate a bit. Not a bad thing....

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  6. 11 hours ago, Rob in (ca) said:

    Something isn’t right, That’s like a new Car dealership like Ford / Chevy / Toyota refusing anymore new cars, because one Model is short in supply.


    Maybe Minelab is slowly moving forward to Direct Sales ? And The Distributor is realizing it. The real answer will never be told 

    Agreed.

    Supply chains for electronic parts (and parts in general) are still brutally slow worldwide. 

    In my business (motorcycles) some parts that used to take a week to get at the dealer level now take several months. Some customers miss out on an entire riding season. New model delays are common.

    IMHO, regardless of the reason for Minelab's new model delays, it seems unprofessional for IDC to publicly shame Minelab. Bad-mouthing a former business associate isn't good for business in the long term. 

    There's more to this story than meets the eye....

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