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Tom_in_CA said:As fozzie & charlie have stated, they're only an audio signal booster. They do nothing to increase the depth the detector is getting. It only makes "louder" what you "already" have coming from the machine. So unless you have a hearing problem, or cheapie headphones that lack volume for some reason, you wouldn't need an audio booster.
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It is one of the best features Fisher ever put on there metal detectors. Those super deep 8 to 9 inch silver dimes, wheaties, etc. are pretty faint, just a whisper on the machine. Without the audio boost amplifying the signal I probably would miss some of those deep ones. I aways crank up my audio boost to max when hunting areas where deep coins are around. If I had to crank up the volume insted of the audio boost I would have lost my hearing years ago. I'd blow out my ear drums. With audio boost only the deep signals are amplified, not the shallow or medium ones.
Tom_in_CA said:I tried one. They're kind of like the old way of causing worms to come to the surface for fishing bait, by shocking the ground with a charge After meticulously going through all the preparations, in a moist park turf environment where I suspected deeper coins were (because the oldest/deepest we could reach were turn-of-century losses, yet the park dated to the 1880s).
After doing all the preparations with a car battery charging the ground for an hour, the only effect it seemed to have, was to energize teeennssy little things to make them sound bolder. For example, you know how sometimes those pencil eraser top things can fool you into sounding like coins (if you're erring on the side of safety)? Well with this depth doubler thing, those little pencil eraser tops sounded even MORE like coins I got no deeper older coins though. So the jury is still out, but all in all, I'd say those were a waste of time.