mrmastadon
Jr. Member
Greetings all!
I would consider myself relatively new to detecting, having previously used a machine that can only be described as cheap, Chinese junk. Recently I remembered just how much I enjoy the hobby and bit the bullet, purchasing an Equinox 600. I've been having a blast digging clad (and a random 1865 IHP that was about 1" below the surface!) in local parks and schoolyards. Generally I have loved learning the machine and its language, and have put about 100 hours on it.
I have read anything online I can find about the Equinox and watched hours and hours of videos, and after all this, while I feel like I've learned an incredible amount, I am haunted by a nagging suspicion that I am not getting the proper depth out of the detector. In my 100 hours, I have dug a couple thousand targets and have never once found anything below 6" or maybe 7" (if I'm being generous), with the exception of some whole aluminum cans, a large square chunk of copper, and an old sewer grate. When I do get a signal showing 4 or 5 depth bars (which I understand is somewhat subjective), the machine has literally never once given a tone or VDI number that is repeatable -- or even close to repeatable -- from two angles.
As for settings, I have tried everything imaginable, starting with stock settings, and all six modes (Park, Field, Beach, 1&2). I have tried raising sensitivity and lowering sensitivity. I have tried auto, manual, tracking, and no GB. I have tried discrimination and no discrimination. I have tried all single frequencies and multi-frequency. I have raised iron bias and lowered iron bias. I have raised recovery speed and lowered recovery speed. I have noise canceled. Still, 6" is my max. (I am using the stock 11" coil).
Now, I am in central North Carolina and at the moment, in the middle of the hot summer, our soil consists of rock-hard, thick red clay interspersed with rocks that make digging deeper than about 4" difficult, even armed with a Lesche Sampson. I understand that these are not ideal conditions and will present depth challenges for any VLF detector. Detectorists in places like Kansas and Nebraska with soft, black, loamy soil will always punch deeper with their machines, but I purchased the Nox in part not just for depth, but for stability/repeatability at depth, and I still feel like I'm coming up short.
Today, I had an idea: while all of my local soil is as described above, I have a raised garden bed that is filled with nice, soft, black, plant-happy dirt. I found an open spot and buried a quarter, dime, and sterling ring at 10". I tried all modes and raised and lowered the various customizations. 98% of my sweeps resulted in absolutely no hits from the detector. Finally -- and only -- in Park 2, with recovery speed 3, sensitivity above 22, no iron bias and no discrimination, I got a very faint, fluty tone over the quarter, and only when swinging the coil as fast as I possibly could. The other items? Nada. At no point, even when the quarter was "detected," did the machine offer a VDI.
So, apologies for the long-winded question but I wanted to give as much detail as possible. Does this sound normal? I will be the first to admit I don't have the level of detecting experience that many of you have, so I may simply be expecting too much out of the machine. But I've read so many posters claiming things like "I found an 11" dime on edge with my Nox" or "My Nox slammed a quarter at 15"" that something just doesn't feel right. I've also watched Calabash's video many times on the Nox with deep silver and I just don't feel like my machine is able to replicate those results, especially after today's test in better soil.
So, newbie inexperience/paranoia, or something else? I would love to hear insight from people far smarter than me when it comes to these things. And thanks in advance to all, as I have long been impressed with both the wisdom and the attitude of users on this forum -- it is a model of how the internet 'should' work, in a more perfect world.
-Andrew
I would consider myself relatively new to detecting, having previously used a machine that can only be described as cheap, Chinese junk. Recently I remembered just how much I enjoy the hobby and bit the bullet, purchasing an Equinox 600. I've been having a blast digging clad (and a random 1865 IHP that was about 1" below the surface!) in local parks and schoolyards. Generally I have loved learning the machine and its language, and have put about 100 hours on it.
I have read anything online I can find about the Equinox and watched hours and hours of videos, and after all this, while I feel like I've learned an incredible amount, I am haunted by a nagging suspicion that I am not getting the proper depth out of the detector. In my 100 hours, I have dug a couple thousand targets and have never once found anything below 6" or maybe 7" (if I'm being generous), with the exception of some whole aluminum cans, a large square chunk of copper, and an old sewer grate. When I do get a signal showing 4 or 5 depth bars (which I understand is somewhat subjective), the machine has literally never once given a tone or VDI number that is repeatable -- or even close to repeatable -- from two angles.
As for settings, I have tried everything imaginable, starting with stock settings, and all six modes (Park, Field, Beach, 1&2). I have tried raising sensitivity and lowering sensitivity. I have tried auto, manual, tracking, and no GB. I have tried discrimination and no discrimination. I have tried all single frequencies and multi-frequency. I have raised iron bias and lowered iron bias. I have raised recovery speed and lowered recovery speed. I have noise canceled. Still, 6" is my max. (I am using the stock 11" coil).
Now, I am in central North Carolina and at the moment, in the middle of the hot summer, our soil consists of rock-hard, thick red clay interspersed with rocks that make digging deeper than about 4" difficult, even armed with a Lesche Sampson. I understand that these are not ideal conditions and will present depth challenges for any VLF detector. Detectorists in places like Kansas and Nebraska with soft, black, loamy soil will always punch deeper with their machines, but I purchased the Nox in part not just for depth, but for stability/repeatability at depth, and I still feel like I'm coming up short.
Today, I had an idea: while all of my local soil is as described above, I have a raised garden bed that is filled with nice, soft, black, plant-happy dirt. I found an open spot and buried a quarter, dime, and sterling ring at 10". I tried all modes and raised and lowered the various customizations. 98% of my sweeps resulted in absolutely no hits from the detector. Finally -- and only -- in Park 2, with recovery speed 3, sensitivity above 22, no iron bias and no discrimination, I got a very faint, fluty tone over the quarter, and only when swinging the coil as fast as I possibly could. The other items? Nada. At no point, even when the quarter was "detected," did the machine offer a VDI.
So, apologies for the long-winded question but I wanted to give as much detail as possible. Does this sound normal? I will be the first to admit I don't have the level of detecting experience that many of you have, so I may simply be expecting too much out of the machine. But I've read so many posters claiming things like "I found an 11" dime on edge with my Nox" or "My Nox slammed a quarter at 15"" that something just doesn't feel right. I've also watched Calabash's video many times on the Nox with deep silver and I just don't feel like my machine is able to replicate those results, especially after today's test in better soil.
So, newbie inexperience/paranoia, or something else? I would love to hear insight from people far smarter than me when it comes to these things. And thanks in advance to all, as I have long been impressed with both the wisdom and the attitude of users on this forum -- it is a model of how the internet 'should' work, in a more perfect world.
-Andrew