Skiron
Jr. Member
- Aug 18, 2019
- 62
- 34
- Detector(s) used
- Equinox 800, XP Deus
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Hi guys,
In my area, and using tracking GB with default ground sens (6), I' getting high 60s to low 70s for ground phase number while sweeping in most areas...unfortunatelly I'm a lite user (ws4 only until Christmas) so no ground mineralization bars to appropriate judge that soil, but I've noticed that my garrett carrot sounds off whenever it touches the ground or even more inside the holes I dig with no obvious remaining target if that's a clue, so I guess that the soil is indeed very hot and mineralized...
So, I read a lot about prefering a higher frequency (eg 18/25 khz vs 8 khz) in hot mineralized soils in order to penetrate deeper, and also a lot of advices to use higher (>2.5/3) reactivity in such hot grounds.
My question is: In such a hot ground with tiny metal soil particles (minerals) all over the place....doesn't the greater wave length of a lower frequency (8khz) penetrate better between the soil particles giving better depth performance vs the higher frequency witch with the smaller wave length will hit every little particle compromising depth?
I would suppose that in very mineralized grounds, the lower frequencies would penetrate deeper due to wave length, without hiting every little tiny soil particle that higher frequency with short wave lengths would do.....isn't that the case? What I'm missing..?
Also, why higher (e.g >2.5/3) reactivity settings work better in such hot environments?
These areas are highly mineralized as stated above, but have medium/little iron contamination (e.g not hearing iron in every swing) so I would prefer to run reactivity @2 or @1 or even @0 in order to achive maximum depth....Could someone explain why in hot mineralized ground the higher reactivity is prefered?
Have a great day!
Regards, Argyris
In my area, and using tracking GB with default ground sens (6), I' getting high 60s to low 70s for ground phase number while sweeping in most areas...unfortunatelly I'm a lite user (ws4 only until Christmas) so no ground mineralization bars to appropriate judge that soil, but I've noticed that my garrett carrot sounds off whenever it touches the ground or even more inside the holes I dig with no obvious remaining target if that's a clue, so I guess that the soil is indeed very hot and mineralized...
So, I read a lot about prefering a higher frequency (eg 18/25 khz vs 8 khz) in hot mineralized soils in order to penetrate deeper, and also a lot of advices to use higher (>2.5/3) reactivity in such hot grounds.
My question is: In such a hot ground with tiny metal soil particles (minerals) all over the place....doesn't the greater wave length of a lower frequency (8khz) penetrate better between the soil particles giving better depth performance vs the higher frequency witch with the smaller wave length will hit every little particle compromising depth?
I would suppose that in very mineralized grounds, the lower frequencies would penetrate deeper due to wave length, without hiting every little tiny soil particle that higher frequency with short wave lengths would do.....isn't that the case? What I'm missing..?
Also, why higher (e.g >2.5/3) reactivity settings work better in such hot environments?
These areas are highly mineralized as stated above, but have medium/little iron contamination (e.g not hearing iron in every swing) so I would prefer to run reactivity @2 or @1 or even @0 in order to achive maximum depth....Could someone explain why in hot mineralized ground the higher reactivity is prefered?
Have a great day!
Regards, Argyris