Twelve hours with this hobby and found my oldest coin today.

BABALONGOGGLES

Jr. Member
Jan 10, 2020
69
311
Eastern WA
Detector(s) used
Nokta Makro Simplex+, Bounty Hunter Tracker IV
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
It was a 1943 Canadian penny found in Eastern Washington, not worth much, but now I have a date to try and beat. I only found pennies today, so I'm wondering if I had the settings off. I feel like I'm not getting deep enough with my BH Tracker IV. Supposedly, a former Nazi once lived in this home and I'm told by the current owner that they tried to build a fence and hit bedrock about 8-10 inches underground. If that's true, I need a better machine to reach that depth. I can't wait to get my tax return and upgrade so I can find the deeper coins. HH from WA.
 

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Welcome from a former Spokane resident. Don't judge your machine's ability on twelve hours, in one yard. Make sure you're swinging that coil correctly. Nice and flat to the ground, almost making contact. Fairly slow swing speed. Good luck, and have fun!
 

BABALONGOGGLES : Nice find by anyone's standards . If your close to Goldendale you should look up a poor old Tom on here . He is a experienced Detectorists. Let me ALSO WELCOME you to a VERY FINE and HELPFUL forum .
 

Welcome to TreasureNet BABALONGOGGLES.

Kray gelder is right. keep that coil on the ground if possible and be sure to have a coil cover. Pay no attention to those "experts" you see on TV who swing six inches over the ground.
Not all treasure is 8-10 inches deep.
 

Welcome to Tnet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :hello2:
 

Congrats your going to be surprised at all the cool coins and relics your gonna find keep em coming and great start Tommy
 

Congratulations, you've got a start. As others have said swing close and slow but don't over do the slow, and also overlap your swings by at least 1/3 coil length/diameter. I also might add turn your sensitivity up to where it gets a little crackly, than back off just to where it sounds smooth on the threshold. Welcome to T net.
 

Around here and especially in yards most of what you are going to find is within four, maybe six inches. Don't be thinking you are missing everything because of depth. I have all the best machines and, yes, they are much better at finding the goodies but most are still shallow. Guess what I'm saying is that odds are you aren't missing much because of depth, more that you just need experience with the machine you have.
Of course it is much more fun with better equipment and I always recommend upgrading when you can so you can enjoy the hobby that much more.
 

Congrats! I started with a BH Discovery 1000....I was pretty sad when the speakers went out and I was going to be forced to use headphones. Hubby got me a Simplex now, but I found some good stuff with the BH. A WWI military button was about 6-7 inches deep. Don’t underestimate that bad boy!
 

Your detector will go about as deep as the size of your coil for coin sized objects. I bought a BH 3300 last year and it had a 7" coil and went about 7" deep. Deeper for larger objects. Yours may have an 8" coil, so if the soil is only 8"deep or so you probably won't gain much by moving to a different detector w a larger coil. Enjoy what you have now and learn the intricacies of the BH TK 4. Those Bounty Hunters really pack a lot of punch for their modest costs.

BTW Gave the 3300 to a sister and her and her husband got hooked on MDing and they bought a second detector for him (AT Pro) for dirt detecting.
Happy Hunting
 

Congratulations on the find, especially being so new to the hobby! The more you use your detector the better you will understand it and make better and older finds. Thanks for sharing! Welcome to the forum from northeastern Oregon. :icon_thumleft:
 

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