GR Guy Posted October 25, 2023 Share Posted October 25, 2023 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chase Goldman Posted October 25, 2023 Share Posted October 25, 2023 Snore.... 2 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeff McClendon Posted October 25, 2023 Share Posted October 25, 2023 REM sleep for me...... 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phrunt Posted October 26, 2023 Share Posted October 26, 2023 Excitement from me! Shame the same level of support isn't going into the Manticore. I hope they make it lighter, there is no way the 15" Coiltek Nox coil needs to be as heavy as it is. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chase Goldman Posted October 26, 2023 Share Posted October 26, 2023 19 hours ago, Jeff McClendon said: REM sleep for me...... I dreaming that Coiltek goes in the opposite direction and makes a decent small elliptical for Manticore slightly larger than the M8 (something like their Nox 5×10 which is a great general purpose coil for polluted, highly mineralized relic and coin sites) 18 hours ago, phrunt said: Excitement from me! Shame the same level of support isn't going into the Manticore. I hope they make it lighter, there is no way the 15" Coiltek Nox coil needs to be as heavy as it is. The ML Equinox 15" elliptical is plenty deep and has a great footprint area to weight ratio. At some point you hit a depth wall with VLF machines and large, round coil sizes where the depth performance plateau's due to ground feedback effects, you lose even small coin sensitivity at moderate depths, and all you get is coverage at a huge weight penalty. So that 30% depth gain claim seems dubious unless you're talking a PI machine. Coiltek's gotta rethink their PI mentality that bigger is better for round VLF coils. Their mid-size Nox elliptical would be a great general purpose coil if they didn't narrow cast it solely for water hunting by intentionally adding weight to it. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Past Member Posted October 26, 2023 Share Posted October 26, 2023 "Up to 30% more depth than the 15" coil". Ya, maybe 30% more depth in the air, on a target the size of can. Whenever a company uses the term "Up to", they are being deliberately misleading. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phrunt Posted October 26, 2023 Share Posted October 26, 2023 It is quite possible the 15x12" maxed out depth on the Nox 800, I know a guy that bought the 15" round and felt it no better than the 15x12" just heavier so he sold it off, wasn't an easy coil for him to sell either and took a big loss on it, I didn't buy it from him for this reason, he'd already told me it was no deeper than his 15x12" which was much lighter. If the 18" is no deeper than the 15x12" in actual field use then it will be another big flop like I guess the 15" round is. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Herschbach Posted October 26, 2023 Share Posted October 26, 2023 Big coils are rare on VLF detectors for a reason. The bigger they are the more ground they see, and the amount of ground seen goes up far faster than the amount of target seen. In the case of coin size targets you could very well get less depth with an 18" coil than a 11" coil. I'd think this would only be useful for very large targets, like fist size or larger, and even then the milder the ground the better. It's what we old timers used to call a cache hunting coil. 9 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GB_Amateur Posted October 26, 2023 Share Posted October 26, 2023 Here's Coiltek's page for this: https://coiltek.com.au/product/18-nox/ 1.05 kg (= 2.3 lb). Hmmm. Almost half the weight of the detector with this coil mounted is the coil, hanging about a meter away from the handle. That's a lot of torque for what is typically a fairly light, fairly well-balanced detector with stock 11" coil. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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