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Was at a local park today and was able to run at 24 sensitivity. I set recovery speed at 4 and dug the good sounds. This penny sound was very faint and I would not have heard it without earbuds. It was so deep, I was about to leave the hole after digging a lot of dirt thinking it was a false signal. Most of the deep coins from this area come out around 8"-10", so this was outside of the norm. The coin was flat on the bottom and was still stuck in the dirt when I dug it out with fingers. I would not believe it if I wasn't there taking the pics.

Equinox, 15" coil, Park 1, 24 sensitivity, 4 recovery speed

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4 minutes ago, NCtoad said:

That’s really impressive!   How was the ID at that depth?

Sound was there, similar to a deep silver dime that sounds high...mostly. I was using 50 tones. The ID was a bit iffy (20-33) and didn't show for about half the sweeps.

I am in FL sandy soil which has close to no mineralization.

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With that big 15” coil watch out.  Next you’ll be digging up a VW bug like 4 feet deep, lol.  

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14 hours ago, Againstmywill said:

The ID was a bit iffy (20-33) and didn't show for about half the sweeps.

That's definitely getting to the edge of detection (-- shows on some sweeps but not others).  And the broadened dTID is typical of my deep coin finds, too, although my record is 9" on a USA 5 center and 8" on our 95% copper pennies and 90% silver dimes.

Florida seems to be its own detecting land.  I recall some of Tom Dankowski posts where he correlates depth with time in the ground.  I don't know how much the soft soil and frequent rainfall has to do with it, but with a year-round growing season, if grass is cut and left to lie it seems its accumulation will build up more quickly than farther north where vegetation goes dormant for at least a few months.

Nice ear, BTW.  :wink:

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