Two Questions. GPZ 7000. Pulse induction. 3D detector.

What kind of engine block are you looking for, and how deep?

Seriously though, the 7000 packs a good punch. But it would help if you gave more info on what you are looking for, expected depth, and in what kind of ground & terrain.
 

What kind of engine block are you looking for, and how deep?

Seriously though, the 7000 packs a good punch. But it would help if you gave more info on what you are looking for, expected depth, and in what kind of ground & terrain.
Rocky terrain. Sedimentary. Not much mineralization. Not looking 20 feet deep or even 15 feet. That was just the statement that was made.

You only get one guess as to what I'm looking for. If you need a hint it's non-ferrous.

Thank you Carl.
 

Is there any hope of ferrous being in the mix? For example, an iron box, firearms, etc.
Is it made up of large masses (bars) or small masses (coins)?
Expected search area size, expected depth, and how long buried can also matter.
If you don't care to share more info, then buy the 7000 and go for it.
 

Is there any hope of ferrous being in the mix? For example, an iron box, firearms, etc.
Is it made up of large masses (bars) or small masses (coins)?
Expected search area size, expected depth, and how long buried can also matter.
If you don't care to share more info, then buy the 7000 and go for it.
I will send you a DM.
 

1. I read by a person of expertise that the GPZ 7000 can "see" an engine block at 15-20 feet. Is this true?

2. Is there a PI 3D detector with depth?
Hi. I owned one and in the air possibly, under the ground no. What, did this expert dig an engine block up from 15 to 20 feet deep. Lots of claims get made by people who, like some fishermen, have elastic rulers.
 

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