asiago
Tenderfoot
- May 10, 2016
- 5
- 10
- Detector(s) used
- Tesoro Compadre, modified BH Pioneer 505
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
Questions about a 'repair upgrade' for a coil shaft
I picked up a used Bounty Hunter Pioneer 505 for $30 from the local classifieds. It had a "broken" headphone jack (plug snapped off inside the jack), but it also has the coil superglued to the shaft - it looks like the nylon bolt used to secure the coil snapped, and they just smeared it all over with superglue. Pics: http://imgur.com/a/jmUlu
Anyways, it operates just fine (except the angle they glued it together means it's best suited for a person much taller than myself) so I was thinking of salvaging the coil (lots of cutting and sanding etc), but instead of just replacing the shaft with a normal replacement, I want to fabricate a hinged/folding shaft to make it more portable. Has anyone ever done anything like this? Aside from the weight (will probably just use wood since that's what I'm best with), are there any other considerations?
I picked up a used Bounty Hunter Pioneer 505 for $30 from the local classifieds. It had a "broken" headphone jack (plug snapped off inside the jack), but it also has the coil superglued to the shaft - it looks like the nylon bolt used to secure the coil snapped, and they just smeared it all over with superglue. Pics: http://imgur.com/a/jmUlu
Anyways, it operates just fine (except the angle they glued it together means it's best suited for a person much taller than myself) so I was thinking of salvaging the coil (lots of cutting and sanding etc), but instead of just replacing the shaft with a normal replacement, I want to fabricate a hinged/folding shaft to make it more portable. Has anyone ever done anything like this? Aside from the weight (will probably just use wood since that's what I'm best with), are there any other considerations?
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