Jump to content

Pi Detectors Rule For Gold, Mostly, I Have Another Target In Mind


Recommended Posts

We are off to Norway in July for two months. I will have a couple of (I hope) well chosen detectors for the usual run of field, meadow, park stuff.

One thing though. there are things older and deeper than my VLF's will find. I detected in Norway a lot in the 90's and found nice stuff, but I didn't have anything which could go to depth on any metal targets which existed.

One interesting thing (sadly) in Norway's history is that th eBlack death hit Norway very hard. about 65% of the population died. Unlike more settled village and town settlement patterns in Europe which helps recovery, the Norwegian population was largely rural on individual farm sites.

the place names all over Norway are sprinkled with places, now often in the forest - Called ødegård - old abandoned farm.

Having a detector which could double VLF depth in all metal could be a really interesting exploratory tool. Mind you, any objects dating from the mid 1600's are National treasure, but I am not looking to supplement my vacation budget and I would fully comply with the rules about that.

I am thinking a ML PI with a more modern battery arrangement which I could manage to legally get on the plane. I don't care about small gold - there isn't any - Would an SD be fine, or is there a reason to go to the GP or GPX range. light is better and old lead acid or other bulky batteries are not good for air transport or my old bones.

Your thoughts.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • The title was changed to Pi Detectors Rule For Gold, Mostly, I Have Another Target In Mind

The GPX series batteries are 18650's inside an alloy housing and marked 7.4v 9.2AH and can be taken on planes.  Not sure about the older GP's but they will be gel cells or something being that age, not sure how planes go with batteries like that?

Buying one of those older SD series you can bet the battery won't be much good unless someones replaced it fairly recently.  I'm sure you'd want good battery life.  I'd personally go a GPX with an aftermarket lightweight battery system.  The GPX 5000 even has a super deep coin and relic timing for milder soils that is far deeper than any other timing on a coin size target, the 5000 also handles EMI reasonably well, put on a DD coil and it's pretty damn good, an AI coil and it works in heavy EMI.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Skip the lead acid batteries and grab a 6v Lithium battery. Capacity of around 7.5Ah is plenty of run time…..at least 8 hours. I run my GP3500 on these……super light and quick to recharge. Remember you don’t need a fancy regulated battery (from the GP3000 onwards….all regulated internally). Also, the old “dome” battery connect to the lithium batteries but are too big to physically mount to the lithium battery (unless you choose a higher Ah battery which then becomes physically bigger). The battery / headphone connector one in the photo is from an old SD2100 setup but they are easy to make yourself if you can basic solder. The 6v lithium batteries are cheap….depending on capacity. Mine was about $60 Aussie dollars. Grab an amplifier if you want to use an external speaker otherwise not needed for headphones. Have a great trip.

 

IMG_1370.jpeg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Gpx 5000 you can use 7.4v 8000 mah lithium. Is lightweight, plus you get much less emi.

The remote control vehicle ones work well. Goldhound had a good post on this but I cant find it.

There are many makes but they are like this

https://www.amazon.com/HOOVO-Connector-Helicopter-Airplane-Quadcopter/dp/B07V5FZV2M/ref=mp_s_a_1_5?crid=N6PH1RPB8I3M&keywords=2s+traxxas+lipo+battery+10000mah+7.4v&qid=1683904030&sprefix=2s+tracxas+lipo+battery+10000+mah+7.4v%2Caps%2C225&sr=8-5

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Perhaps the Garrett Axiom is an alternate worth considering, good range of OEM coils, discrim. DD,  light, ergonomic, cordless, powerful with easy to get at settings. I cannot say how it would go as a relic detector, I only chase gold with it downunder here.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, Norvic said:

Perhaps the Garrett Axiom is an alternate worth considering, good range of OEM coils, discrim. DD,  light, ergonomic, cordless, powerful with easy to get at settings. I cannot say how it would go as a relic detector, I only chase gold with it downunder here.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would think the DIV CW crazies (oops, bad choice of words) who go to Culpeper and are rabid (there I go again) about finding as much good stuff as possible in a short amount of time would be knowledgeable on relic PI detecting.  Even if they haven't used every model they see others swinging all varieties of PI's.  I suspect some here can already tell you what the Garrett Axiom is capable of in that trying environment.  @Chase Goldman and @abenson are two here I bet can give you some indication.

You didn't mention cost limitations but did say weight is a concern.  Keep in mind that some gold detectorists are willing to swing a 7+ lb GPZ7000 so 'lightweight' to them has a different meaning than for most of us.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 5/12/2023 at 12:31 PM, Norvic said:

Perhaps the Garrett Axiom is an alternate worth considering, good range of OEM coils, discrim. DD,  light, ergonomic, cordless, powerful with easy to get at settings. I cannot say how it would go as a relic detector, I only chase gold with it downunder here.

Yep.  Except for cost (because as a fairly recent release, you will unlikely find many on the used market like with a GPX).  But, if a PI is needed, the Axiom would easily be my choice for trips involving air travel over the GPX 5000 or earlier for all the reasons mentioned above.  Fantastic for deep relic, treasure, coin, jewelry, wet beach or prospecting in difficult soil or salt.  It can be collapsed and disassebled down into it's included soft case/backpack which meets carry-on dimensions, with two coils in the case and can easily accommodate additional personal items you want to carry on board.  The internal Li-Ion battery (no clunky cords or 3rd party compact batteries needed) is well below air travel capacity limits, yet will run the machine at 10 to 12 hours a clip and there is a removeable external AA backup battery compartment attachment included.  My GPX 4800 has been sold and is now a distant memory after a very successful relic outing with the Axiom in April (see pics).

Axiom made quite a splash at the last DIV and won over several ex-ML PI converts. 

The GPX 6000 would be another consideration, but it lacks iron check, has less manual control and is more expensive than Axiom.  @abenson is a resident expert regarding successful relic detecting with the GPX 6000.

20230513_120612.thumb.jpg.775ce7df4385ef91d9fe26858fbfba50.jpg

20230513_120721.thumb.jpg.cdfb62cd550c577d58e4e10208d472a2.jpg

Remove the coil and you can stow it in the case with room to spare.  My Deus 2 (which would also be my vlf air travel detector of choice) lying beside for scale, below).

20230513_114330.thumb.jpg.2311d3ff870dc06c1600e718ab00bb8a.jpg

Some of my Axiom finds shown below from the last DIV that was at a site that straddled a small engagement known as the Battle of Freeman's Ford that included many artillery fragments, large lead sabot, a Hotchkiss shell fuze, lead case shot, some miscellaneous brass including a brass thimble, an iron buckle, and a 1923 SLQ that must have been dropped in 1923 (exactly 100 years ago) based on its condition.  (Yep, Chuck we're crazy but bet you'll get a kick out of this find).  I'll tell the whole story of this hunt in a separate post.  It was really fun and with Axiom, felt I was swinging a cordless vlf.

20230513_115621.thumb.jpg.2a264b019cb3e44e2a6b60954739a82c.jpg

20230513_115805.thumb.jpg.83da185396fde1520978991dde0836bf.jpg

20230513_115727.thumb.jpg.3d41df027747023bb3e47f59f80e77f3.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, GB_Amateur said:

Keep in mind that some gold detectorists are willing to swing a 7+ lb GPZ7000 so 'lightweight' to them has a different meaning than for most of us.

Thanks for bringing that up, it often goes forgotten.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Chase Goldman said:

(Yep, Chuck we're crazy but bet you'll get a kick out of this find).

You got that right and I wonder why you've been hiding it from us.  I'd have been bragging on the forum a day or two after getting home.  As I mentioned fairly recently where someone found a 1923-S, pre-1925 SLQ's with date showing at all are tough finds.  Yours is a (relatively speaking) common date+mintmark but the condition is superb for a circulated coin.  I'm not going to attempt a (likely) innaccurate grade, but look at those stars on the shield, detail in the chain mail vest and rest of the clothing.  How about the beading around the rim?  Probably not a 3 digit valued coin (on an open market like Ebay -- worth looking though) but easily 10x bullion value.  And then there's the display value.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...