Sweep speed and the X axis vs. the Y axis...single freq. VLF vs. BBS/PI's in wet sand
Here is the scenario:
A very busy East Coast resort island with several areas of intense crowd density spread along a few miles of coast.
A large tidal range...8 to 10 feet depending on moon phase...resulting in LOTS of sand to cover at low tide...and a tendency for high specific gravity targets to sink out of detection range quickly.
Moderate to low mineralization.
I have been hitting this beach fairly hard for two weeks with a combination of a Headhunter Pulse (11 inch coil) and an Excal wired with a WOT. I have found two nice gold rings during this period, but I am always looking to increase my yields.
The other day a newbie with an inexpensive Bounty Hunter came up to chat. He had been reading the forums and had some knowledge and was concentrating on working the dry sand because he felt he could get no performance in the wet sand. Just for fun, we backed down the sensitivity on his machine until it ran stable and I buried my 4gm, 14kt. test ring down to about 3 inches in the wet sand to see if his machine would get it. It did so easily. I buried it at 6 inches...his machine got the ring...the signal response was somewhat marginal, but was definitely a target you would dig. I explained to him that most of my good finds came within that 6 inch range---especially on this particular beach.
Sorry to be long winded, but this experience gave me an almost blasphemous thought: that on this beach, with an impossible amount of sand to cover between tides, coupled with the fact that heavy targets almost always sink out of detection range after 1 complete tidal swing, that a fast-sweep speed single frequency VLF with a huge coil might out produce a pulse machine or a BBS machine with a WOT.
I have to take a few days off to take care of some business, but I hope to be back in the field later this week.
I am breaking out my White's Eagle Spectrum and my 18 inch Bigfoot coil and am going to see what this set-up can do.
Testing has shown that I can expect to get around 6 inches of depth with this rig on an average gold ring in the wet sand.
I realize this is a far cry from the depths achievable with my Headhunter or Excal, but I will be covering a vast amount of sand with each swing. Yes, the Bigfoot is only 3 inches longer than the WOT, but the Eagle Spectrum likes to be swung fast...I think it might be possible to nearly double the amount of sand I can cover between tidal swings.
Any thoughts or experiences using a similar set-up?
Could sand coverage be more important than raw depth on a beach like this?
Here is the scenario:
A very busy East Coast resort island with several areas of intense crowd density spread along a few miles of coast.
A large tidal range...8 to 10 feet depending on moon phase...resulting in LOTS of sand to cover at low tide...and a tendency for high specific gravity targets to sink out of detection range quickly.
Moderate to low mineralization.
I have been hitting this beach fairly hard for two weeks with a combination of a Headhunter Pulse (11 inch coil) and an Excal wired with a WOT. I have found two nice gold rings during this period, but I am always looking to increase my yields.
The other day a newbie with an inexpensive Bounty Hunter came up to chat. He had been reading the forums and had some knowledge and was concentrating on working the dry sand because he felt he could get no performance in the wet sand. Just for fun, we backed down the sensitivity on his machine until it ran stable and I buried my 4gm, 14kt. test ring down to about 3 inches in the wet sand to see if his machine would get it. It did so easily. I buried it at 6 inches...his machine got the ring...the signal response was somewhat marginal, but was definitely a target you would dig. I explained to him that most of my good finds came within that 6 inch range---especially on this particular beach.
Sorry to be long winded, but this experience gave me an almost blasphemous thought: that on this beach, with an impossible amount of sand to cover between tides, coupled with the fact that heavy targets almost always sink out of detection range after 1 complete tidal swing, that a fast-sweep speed single frequency VLF with a huge coil might out produce a pulse machine or a BBS machine with a WOT.
I have to take a few days off to take care of some business, but I hope to be back in the field later this week.
I am breaking out my White's Eagle Spectrum and my 18 inch Bigfoot coil and am going to see what this set-up can do.
Testing has shown that I can expect to get around 6 inches of depth with this rig on an average gold ring in the wet sand.
I realize this is a far cry from the depths achievable with my Headhunter or Excal, but I will be covering a vast amount of sand with each swing. Yes, the Bigfoot is only 3 inches longer than the WOT, but the Eagle Spectrum likes to be swung fast...I think it might be possible to nearly double the amount of sand I can cover between tidal swings.
Any thoughts or experiences using a similar set-up?
Could sand coverage be more important than raw depth on a beach like this?
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