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TARGET DEPTH

The device provides an estimated target depth according to the signal strength. In the 

pinpoint mode, estimated target depth is shown on the display in cms (or inches - please 

see below for details) while getting closer to the target.
Depth detection is adjusted presuming that the target is a 2.5cm (1'') coin. Actual depth 

varies according to the size of the target. For instance, the detector will indicate more 

depth for a target smaller than a 2.5cm (1'') coin and less depth for a larger target. In reality, 

pinpoint procedure is not intended for depth determination but exact location determina-

tion. Therefore, it is recommended that the depth indicator on the display is used for deter-

mining the proximity to the target.

IMPORTANT!

 If you want the target depth to be displayed in inches instead of cms please 

do the following: While the device is off, press and hold the SELECT and EXPERT buttons 

simultaneously and turn the device on. ''In'' will be displayed. To switch back to cms, you 

need to turn the device off and then repeat the above procedure. While the device is initial-

izing, ''SI'' will be displayed.

LARGE OR NEAR-SURFACE TARGETS

Targets which are near the surface may give multiple different signals to the device. If you 

suspect a target near the surface, lift the search coil and swing it more slowly until a single 

signal is received. Also, if there is a large target near the surface it may cause an overload 

in the search coil and the device starts to generate a continuous sound which resembles 

a siren. “Overload” message is shown on the display simultaneously. In such a case, lift the 

search coil up until the message disappears.

FALSE SIGNALS AND REASONS

Sometimes, the device may produce signals which are similar to a target signal although 

no metal target is present. There are various reasons for the false signals received by the 

device. The most common ones are ground mineralization or rocks with high mineral con-

tent, surrounding electromagnetic signals, operation of another nearby detector, rusted 

or corroded iron or foil in the soil, gain or threshold values set too high.
Surrounding electromagnetic signals can be eliminated by reducing the gain. If another 

detector is operating nearby, you may attempt to shift the frequency or perform your 

search at a distance where no interference occurs. If these do not improve the situation, 

you may try changing the operating frequency (5kHz/14kHz/20kHz) of the device. For 

ground mineralization or rocks with high mineral content, and gain and threshold set too 

high, please read the related sections.

MAGNETIC MINERALIZATION INDICATOR

The Magnetic Mineralization Indicator consists of 5 levels. The indicator is shown empty at 

low mineral levels during search and at start up. In areas where the magnetic mineral level 

is high, the indicator level increases according to the intensity. This measurement can be 

summarized as the level of magnetic property and intensity of the ground. Simply, if you 

are working in an area which contains intense and magnetized minerals, the level will be 

high. If you are working on a less intense ground, the level will be low.

This measurement is important from two aspects. First, on grounds with high magnetic 

mineralization, search depth is low and users should be aware of this fact. Second, mag-

netic mineralization is a property which is particularly seen with mineralized rocks and 

this measurement plays an important role for the device to eliminate the false signals 

produced by these rocks.

ROCKS AND SEARCHING IN ROCKY TERRAINS (GENERAL AND DISCRIMINATION MODES)

Challenging ground conditions arise especially when conductivity and magnetic properties 

of the ground is too intense. Operation of the device over such ground is made possible 

by selecting the best operating mode and using proper ground balance, gain, iSAT and 

threshold settings.

Stones and rocks or cavities inside the ground are as important as the ground itself in regards 

to the search and target detection quality.
Soil and rocks have two different properties just like the targets you are searching for. One 

of them is the intensity and the other one is the conductivity - magnetic permeability ratio 

and these two properties are independent from each other.  In this manual, the conductivity 

- magnetic permeability ratio will be referred to as ID in short. High magnetic permeability, 

low conductivity results in low ID. Soil or rocks can be highly permeable and have low or high 

IDs as well. If the conductivity increases relatively to magnetic permeability then the ID will 

also increase.
Hot rocks are classified as negative or positive based on their ID being low or high in com-

parison to the ID of the soil they are in. One or both of the types may be present in a field. 

The negative and positive effects mentioned here will only be valid if ground balancing 

is properly done on the existing ground. Otherwise, soil itself will not act differently from 

hot rocks in terms of ID. In ''Tracking'' however, conditions will differ. Therefore, the effects 

of  rocks in tracking will be discussed separately. Here we are referring to a proper ground 

balance without tracking.

Positive rocks act just like metal and produce a metal sound. In the General Search Modes 

(GEN and GEN (D)) they produce a “zip zip” sound when the search coil is moved over them. 

If the signal is strong enough, the device may produce an ID for these rocks. Negative rocks 

in the General Search modes, produce a long “boing” sound when the search coil is moved 

over them. The device does not give an ID for  these rocks even if the signal is strong.

Positive rocks provide a typical metal sound in discrimination modes. Negative rocks do not 

provide a sound in discrimination modes (except for rare cases of false signals).

At higher settings of iSAT, there will be no change in the sounds of positive or negative hot 

rocks. As the iSAT value is decreased, the sound of positive hot rocks will remain the same 

but the negative hot rocks may give a thinner beep sound instead of the boing sound.

Therefore, you can make a decision by listening to the  audio responses produced by the 

device in the field. If you receive a metal sound, it means that you either detected a positive 

rock or a piece of metal. If you receive a strong signal and a stable ID, you can distinguish 

if the detected target is a rock or metal by checking the ID. However, remember that weak 

signals may produce different IDs and metals under rocks may produce different metal 

signals. Therefore, the most appropriate action is to dig up when a metal signal is received.
If you are operating with discrimination modes and you know the ID of the surrounding 

rocks, you can use the Disc. setting to eliminate the rocks. However, this may not be sufficient 

to avoid all rock signals. The device may still receive signals from rocks because soil and rocks 

together will form a combined effect and generate a different ID than those of rocks.

NOTE:

 In static modes, the device will produce an audio response for the positive rocks but 

not for the negative ones. The effects of rocks will be reflected on screen as drifts in the right 

(positive) or left (negative) direction in the ID scale. In the case of a positive drift, there are 2 

ways to check whether the target is a rock or not:

1)

 If the ID scale fills up instantly along with the audio and then drops,

2)

 If it does not provide any ID at all or a very low ID, then the target is a rock.

TRACKING AND EFFECTS OF ROCKS

When the tracking is active, the device may give an audio response and ID when it passes 

over a hot rock because the effect of the rock will be different than the ground's. If you 

swing the search coil over the rock, tracking will automatically adjust the setting and the 

audio response/ID will either disappear or diminish significantly. Because there is a slight 

delay in tracking, you may hear a strong signal at the first one or two swings until the 

setting is adjusted. Then the sound will get weaker and disappear. This will not happen with 

metal targets because metals will prevent the device from ground balancing. Therefore, in 

tracking, if you are getting a constant signal over a target after repeated swings, there is a 

high possibility that the target is a metal. Moving from over a rock back to soil, the device 

may give signals to the ground for a few swings until the ground balance setting is updated 

again. This is normal and should not mislead you.

Tracking is not recommended to eliminate rocks under normal conditions. It is recom-

mended for use in areas with changing soil types.

METALS UNDER ROCKS

IMPACT

 increases the possibility of detecting metal targets under mineralized rocks through 

the proper adjustment of your settings. The combined effect created by the rock and metal 

together is lower than the effect that the metal creates by itself and the displayed ID will be 

different than the metal's expected ID. The displayed ID is formed by the combination of rock 

and metal together and gets closer to the ID of the rock if the size of the metal is smaller in 

relation to the rock. Keep in mind that metals under hot rocks will never appear with their 

own metal ID. For instance, a gold piece under a brick may produce an iron tone and ID.

Remember this very simple principle as it will save you lots of time: “If the target you detect 

is not a stone, it can be metal”.

The key to detecting targets under mineralized rocks, particularly when positive rocks are in 

question, is the knowledge of the maximum ID value produced by the surrounding positive 

rocks. If you are performing a search in the General Search modes, monitor the ID produced 

by the device. If the ID provided by your device is close to the rock and iron zone, it is quite 

possible that you detected a target under the rock. In the case of using Disc. in the GEN 

mode, all rocks below the Disc. level will produce a low iron tone and all above will produce 

a higher tone.

If you filter off the rocks with a correctly adjusted ID Disc. setting in discrimination modes, 

you can hear the signal of the target under the rock if the target signal has a slightly greater 

effect than the filtered ID. The important thing here is that if you detect a target and dig out 

a rock, you should note the ID you got before digging and use it as the Disc. value the next 

time. 

For instance; the hot rocks in your search field tend to give IDs around 00-01. In this case, you 

should set the Disc. to maximum 02. This way you can eliminate rocks and receive the signals 

of metals underneath. If you set the Disc. too high unnecessarily, you will lose metals along 

with rocks.

If the hot rocks in your search area tend to give high IDs, then the chances of missing the 

signals of small metals underneath will be high as well.

SEARCHING IN SHALLOW WATER AND BEACH

All search coils of the 

IMPACT

 metal detector are waterproof. This provides convenient 

searching in shallow water and on the beach. When searching around water, be careful not 

to get the system box wet. This includes the arm cup and control head electronics. 

As explained before, salt water and alkali grounds are significantly conductive and cause 

effects similar to iron in detectors. 

IMPACT

’s COG mode is specially designed for such 

conditions. You can perform your search easily using the COG mode without requiring any 

special settings.

COG mode is ideal for salty wet beach sand. You can use the other modes while performing 

search over dry beach sand.

You should consider the following while performing search over wet beach sand or 

water:
1)

 When you swing the search coil over the holes you dig in wet beach sand, you can receive 

metal signals, this is a normal condition.

2)

 The search coil may give false signals when going into and coming out of the water so 

please try to keep the coil either in or out of the water.

Summary of Contents for Nokta

Page 1: ......

Page 2: ......

Page 3: ...detector may only be disassembled and repaired by Nokta Authorized Service Centers Unauthorized disassembly intrusion into the metal detector control housing for any reason voids the warranty IMPORTA...

Page 4: ...ETTINGS PINPOINT TARGET DEPTH LARGE OR SHALLOW TARGETS FALSE SIGNALS AND REASONS MAGNETIC MINERALIZATION INDICATOR ROCKS AND SEARCHING IN ROCKY TERRAINS TRACKING AND EFFECTS OF ROCKS METALS UNDER ROCK...

Page 5: ...ble will not come out from the top of the shaft in the next step 6 Join the two connectors of the system box cable and coil cable paying attention to the pins then tighten The system box cable is a re...

Page 6: ...settings Keypad for navigation among menu options and changing the device settings EXPERT button to access the expert settings LED flashlight On Off and volume overload volume adjustment button Headp...

Page 7: ...the operating frequency chosen Battery life will be less in 5kHz compared to other frequencies Other factors such as LED flashlight usage and usage of speaker or wired wireless headphones will also a...

Page 8: ...ion which shows the warning messages 6 Section which shows the Target ID upon target detection the ground balance whole number value during ground balancing and the estimated target depth in the pinpo...

Page 9: ...t of the shaft so that you are standing in an upright position your arm is relaxed and the search coil is approximately 5cm 2 above the ground It is important to keep the search coil parallel to the g...

Page 10: ...if you don t want to detect ferrous metals with 00 05 ID in the DI2 mode you can set the Disc to 5 9 If you are detecting in a very trashy area and the device is getting too many iron signals instead...

Page 11: ...mps for the ground balance to be completed 4 Upon completion of the ground balance ground balance value is shown on the display GB The device continues to ground balance and produce a beep sound as lo...

Page 12: ...and switch the device to the GEN mode 2 You need to listen to the sounds coming from the ground in order to perform manual ground balance Pump the search coil up and down from about 15 20 cm 6 8 above...

Page 13: ...d balance While tracking is active the device can initially produce a loud signal when it detects a different ground structure for instance a mineral rock or a target In this case swing the search coi...

Page 14: ...ly composite soil structure a ground balance should be performed again to adapt to the varying soil structure In addition re ground balancing is recommended if you change the operating frequency of th...

Page 15: ...ill appear on the screen If you wish to revert back to the normalized IDs repeat the same process and letters no will appear on the screen Tables outlining the search modes and ID ranges as well as th...

Page 16: ...to the signal strength The threshold in this mode is internal and cannot be adjusted by the user Changes in the ground and temperature may lead to drifts in the threshold Threshold drifts will be ref...

Page 17: ...ls with 0 20 ID and a higher tone for all targets with 21 99 ID Upon target detection the threshold will momentarily go silent and only the target audio response will be heard The duration of the thre...

Page 18: ...e Discrimination DI4 4 tone discrimination mode designed for coin hunting in low medium mineralization Due to its high gain and depth this mode is a bit noisier than the other modes Noise will be more...

Page 19: ...ly noisier Noise will be more in the air versus in the ground Take this fact into consideration when adjusting the gain level While searching in this mode a slower swing speed is required The discrimi...

Page 20: ...t back to the modes window NOTE You can go from basic settings to expert settings directly simply by pressing the EXPERT button However you cannot go from expert settings back to basic settings direct...

Page 21: ...d more if the coil is in free air than sweeping the coil on the ground Please keep this factor in mind while adjusting the gain Gain in Static Modes The factory default for the gain setting is optimiz...

Page 22: ...GEN GEN D STA STA D DEEP VLX1 and VLX2 modes In other words as the Disc is increased up to the above mentioned levels stabil ity will increase but depth will be reduced and vice versa Above these lev...

Page 23: ...provides short vibration signals The magnitude of the vibration effect can vary according to the depth of the target and the swinging speed This setting is common in all search modes except for STA a...

Page 24: ...shift the operating frequency of the device 5kHz 14kHz 20kHz in the Expert Setting may also be changed Factory Default Save FD Save With the FD Save feature of the IMPACT you can save your settings o...

Page 25: ...plus and minus buttons are used The cursor blinks while it is moving on the scale When you are on the first ID that you want to reject press the SELECT button once This ID is now rejected and it is sh...

Page 26: ...use the Tone Break feature first select this setting from the Expert Settings The names of the metal groups mentioned above will appear at the bottom of the screen The Tone Break point of the metal gr...

Page 27: ...lowly for a deeper detection iSAT consists of 10 levels The device will start at level 6 It is recommended that iSAT should be increased in high mineralization and decreased in low mineralization iSAT...

Page 28: ...IMPACT offers 3 operating frequencies 5kHz 14kHz and 20kHz to suit different target and soil types Based on the frequency selected the detector s detection performance for different types of targets...

Page 29: ...in pitch and volume as the search coil approaches the target In this mode the device does not discriminate or give target IDs If the device is in the vibration mode the speed of vibration will increa...

Page 30: ...starts to generate a continuous sound which resembles a siren Overload message is shown on the display simultaneously In such a case lift the search coil up until the message disappears FALSE SIGNALS...

Page 31: ...sitive based on their ID being low or high in com parison to the ID of the soil they are in One or both of the types may be present in a field The negative and positive effects mentioned here will onl...

Page 32: ...is a slight delay in tracking you may hear a strong signal at the first one or two swings until the setting is adjusted Then the sound will get weaker and disappear This will not happen with metal tar...

Page 33: ...l lose metals along with rocks If the hot rocks in your search area tend to give high IDs then the chances of missing the signals of small metals underneath will be high as well SEARCHING IN SHALLOW W...

Page 34: ...ground balancing It does not indicate any error or problem It only indicates what should be done Check Coil It indicates an interruption in the search coil transmitter signal The search coil connecto...

Page 35: ...ne Break Notch Filter Ground Balance Pinpoint Frequency Shift Vibration Gain Setting Target ID Search Coil Display Backlight LED Flashlight Weight Length Battery Warranty VLF 5kHz 14kHz 20kHz 150 Hz 7...

Page 36: ...4 89 1928 Six Pence 55 72 79 30 53 62 1868 Six Pence 74 84 85 55 74 79 1842 Four Pence 68 83 84 49 69 75 1952 Three Pence 74 84 85 56 74 80 IMPORTANT If you are using the Normalized ID scale the devic...

Page 37: ...03 x 03 x 03 x 03 x 03 x 03 x 03 x 03 x 03 FD Save Fd SA x x x x x x x x x x x x EXPERT Notch Filter 00 99 x 03 x 03 x 03 x 03 x 10 x 15 x 00 x 00 Audio Tone 15 70 x 33 x 33 x 15 33 x 15 33 64 x 15 33...

Page 38: ...x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x WET BEACH SAND x x PARKS TRASHY SITES x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x TARGET 5kHz 14kHz 20kHz 5kHz 14kHz 20kHz 5kHz 14kHz 20kHz 5kHz 14kHz 20kHz 5kHz 14kHz 20kHz 5k...

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