tigerbeetle
Full Member
- Jan 2, 2009
- 166
- 275
- Detector(s) used
- Many -- Fisher, White's, Minelab, Cobra, others
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
I'm 1,000 percent into my new F75 Fisher. It's insanely good at ferreting out good readings among ferrous material. However, it is highly sensitive to electrical power wires. And that got kinda weird yesterday when I returned to a hot site I had successfully worked a few days earlier, near a busy road. This time, when I turned on my machine, it went gonzo. It was so chattery and jumpy the numbers on the screen where going crazy. I even unplugged the loop. The racket continued. It was totally unusable. As noted, only days before I experienced only a bare minimum of power line interference there.
I assumed the worst: My F75 had turned against me. I was heading to this forum to see where I should send it for repairs.
It was on a fluke that I first headed into some nearby woods to try bottle digging. There, just for the hell of it, I tried the F75. It worked like a charm. I wasn't real far from the first site so I worked my way back, while swinging the machine. Sure enough, the closer I got, the crazier the detector became, quickly reaching unusableness.
Anyone conversant on power line energy fluctuations? Can the same power lines emit (greatly) varying amounts of electromagnetic energy at different times of the day/week/month? That's kinda important to know with so many finer detectors being so highly sensitive to electronic interference.
I assumed the worst: My F75 had turned against me. I was heading to this forum to see where I should send it for repairs.
It was on a fluke that I first headed into some nearby woods to try bottle digging. There, just for the hell of it, I tried the F75. It worked like a charm. I wasn't real far from the first site so I worked my way back, while swinging the machine. Sure enough, the closer I got, the crazier the detector became, quickly reaching unusableness.
Anyone conversant on power line energy fluctuations? Can the same power lines emit (greatly) varying amounts of electromagnetic energy at different times of the day/week/month? That's kinda important to know with so many finer detectors being so highly sensitive to electronic interference.
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