Jump to content

Lanny

Full Member
  • Posts

    740
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    6

 Content Type 

Forums

Detector Prospector Magazine

Detector Database

Downloads

Posts posted by Lanny

  1. Took the Gold Racer out for a coin shoot last night.

    Found a handful of pennies from the 1940 war years, all the way back to 1932. Also found a very old silver spoon (late 1800's/early 1900's Rogers Brothers) that looks like it was in a fire. That's the first time I've ever found a silver spoon, but I have no idea if it's plate or sterling, doing a little research on that, (no copper showing through, and I scratched it pretty good when I hit it with the pick).

    I had permission to detect an old home site that's being repurposed for a new business, so while the whole area is torn up, I'm using it as a test bed.

    The Gold Racer ran well, and it took a while to get used to using the discrimination modes, and I played around with the tone break after I learned the digital ID's of a few trash targets and some highly conductive ones too, so that helped. In addition, I was surprised at the depth it hit some of those coins, no ID digital display numbers, but a sweet tone to guide my ears. Furthermore, when I'd dug down five or six inches, I'd get a digital readout, and then it read solid and pinned at 84. Then I used the Garrett Carrot to pinpoint. 

    Newer pennies were hitting at 80. The silver spoon, much higher of course.

    I have other machines I like better for coins, but I thought I'd see what there was in the Gold Racer tank anyway, and I wasn't disappointed. Not a coin machine for sure as that's not its purpose, but it will lead to the goodies regardless. (Still a lot to learn about the machine for me yet.)

    All the best,

    Lanny

    P.S. Took it out again tonight, 10 more pennies from WWII, two silver dimes, 1927 penny, 1916 large cent, old pocket knife and a cool toy gun!

    • Like 3
  2. Sounds very interesting Reg. I wonder, does it have a good discriminator with a digital readout for ID'ing target responses? With a combination like that, and a nice selection of coils, it would be a dream machine indeed! But, perhaps it will take a while to incorporate wish list items like that.

    All the best, and thanks for your response,

    Lanny

  3. 19 hours ago, tvanwho said:

    Love your stories Lanny.....but I can't recall where you live?

    We actually struck gold in a new area this past weekend, in a 2 foot wide ditch  in a farmers field near Galena, Illinois.

    It wasn't but a few colors and some pretty red rocks in gravels  but it proves gold is in this old lead mining area.

    How do we tell if its glacial gold or native to the area?

    -Tom V.

    Thanks for dropping in Tom.

    I'm located in Western Canada, and I chase most of my gold in Montana, and British Columbia, though I have chased a few nuggets in Idaho, Nevada, Arizona, Utah and Alaska, so I still have a lot of places yet to try.

    Where I live, glacial gold is tiny, hammered flat, and it floats very easily in the pan if it gets any chance to do so. This is due to the hammer-mill or roller-ball effect of the slow but continuous grinding motion of the gigantic glaciers of long ago. Imagine a sheet of ice miles thick pressing down on everything underneath it with titanic pressures and you'll understand why any chunks of gold were ground to a powder.

    When I find nuggets, some of them are hammered flat as well, but they often still have character (lumps and bumps, crystalline structures,  sometimes attached quartz, etc. that won't survive an extended period of hammering action by rocks). So, if you find any pieces of any size with character, you'll have a much better chance of being close to a deposit of some sort. One of the best ways to get an idea is to check the government geological reports for your area as many are quite comprehensive in their reports on any precious metals found around your location.

    All the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 2
  4. 11 hours ago, Steve Herschbach said:

    I can’t say I have used my Gold Racer much the last year but I won’t let it go. It was a unique machine at the time and the 56khz design with discrimination options appeals to me. One thing I am curious about in this day and age of the Deus high frequency coils is how the Gold Racer compares to a Deus HF coil for sniffing non-ferrous relics, especially when running the concentric coil on the Gold Racer.

    Great post Lanny, thanks!

     

    Thanks Steve for all of your write-ups on detectors. You've done the detecting world a great service by providing such concise reviews of such a wide range of detectors over the years. You sir are a study in excellence!

    I plan on giving the Gold Racer a hard run this season to see what it's capable of.

    All the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  5. 11 hours ago, Stephen newell said:

    Macro gold racer is a beast. I have one and love it. I was able to keep up with a gold bug and a sdc2300. Found stuff they missed and they would ask me to check there holes lol. Great unit and a good price. I too am waiting for a macro PI unit.

    I certainly was impressed!

    I wonder if Makro has a PI in the works?

    Thanks for dropping in, and all the best,

    Lanny

  6. 7 hours ago, kiwijw said:

    Awesome Lanny. Great post & great reward. Where are the photos? :biggrin:. Well done mate. You would have been chuffed. Thanks.

    Best of luck out there

    JW:smile:

    I know, no photos this time as I left my phone (only camera I had on the trip) in the truck as I wanted no possible interference from the device while I was conducting my test.

    Thanks for dropping in to say hello, great to hear from you as always, and all the best,

    Lanny

  7. On 12/23/2017 at 5:02 PM, Gerry in Idaho said:

    Golden words of advice Doc.  I too find gold most times I go out to known nugget areas.  I am usually getting the big EGG-O when Prospecting for new ground.  But on a rare occasion that new ground can lead to some serious gold.  The attached photo is of one of my customers who spend a winter doing research and decided to hunt 4 different areas with his dad.  The last place turned to be a real winner with over a pound of gold from there.  Keep it up.

    050107i.JPG

    Loved the picture and the wise words!

    All the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 2
  8. 25 minutes ago, tvanwho said:

    Cool, but I always did wonder what pushing the  plunger did to make things go Boom?

    Found this answer for you: When you push down the plunger down, the rack gear on the plunger shaft turns a pinion gear on a magneto (a type of electrical generator) shaft. The current this produces sets off the primer charge, which in turn detonates the dynamite or whatever explosive you happen to be using.

    All the best,

    Lanny

  9. If you can find a local that knows the area and that will let you tag along, invaluable. As others have stated, join some clubs, instant bond with others sharing the same passion plus lots of good people that will likely share some priceless tips once they see you're serious. Oh, and if someone says something like, "If I was going to use this detector for this . . . or if I was going to look in a particular place I'd do this . . . ", pay attention! It doesn't matter how many books you've read or videos you've watched, there's nothing like getting first-hand advice from someone familiar with any particular gold field with any particular recovery method, or with any particular detector.

    Good luck, and welcome to the passion as you find someone that will give you real-time lessons in the field,

    Lanny

  10. This is also outside the question, but in relation to the last response about the pan. The last few years I've been in a spot with lots of nuggets (old bedrock workings) where if I'd have taken the time to sift and sort every signal, I'd have recovered far less gold, so I use the plastic gold pan for a "speed" tool. I look at the display when there's a good tone, throw the target material in the pan and keep at it recovering as many possible targets in the time I have available to hunt the old workings. Then, when I need a break, I carefully pan (using a safety pan as well) the material to see what I've recovered. Saves a lot of target separating time and leaves me with a nice catch of nuggets in the poke at the end of the day allowing me to cover far more ground.

    Oh, and I must add, when nuggets are travelling in crevices, lots of smaller gold drops along with them as well (most of the time, but there have been exceptions), so I also get the benefit of having cleaned crevices to get the nuggets but having the bonus of fine accompanying gold as well.

    All the best, and I know this is straying from the seed ideas of the post, but I thought I'd share how I've found a plastic pan valuable as I can quickly scan it to ensure the target's made it into the pan as well,

    Lanny

    • Like 5
×
×
  • Create New...