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6.

 

Try finding other metal in the area. When 

you find a metal item, wait a few seconds 

after the tone stops before continuing, to allow 

the detector time to reset (or, press the red 

button on the handle to return the pointer to 

the center of the view meter). 

 

FINE-TUNING THE DETECTOR 

After you become familiar with how your 

detector works, you can fine-tune it to make it 

more selective in what it finds. 

 

Discrimination is the detectors’ ability to 

differentiate between types of metal. The 

detector’s DISCRIMINATION setting 

determines whether the detector will distinguish 

between different types of ferrous and 

non-ferrous metals. 

 

You can set DISCRIMINATION to minimum 

(fully counterclockwise), to maximum (fully 

clockwise), or anywhere in between. As you set 

DISCRIMINATION to higher levels, the 

detector first does not detect small pieces of 

silver paper, then thick foil, and finally metal 

objects like pull tabs from aluminum cans. 

PINPOINTING A TARGET 

 

Accurately pinpointing a target makes digging 

it up easier. 

 

Accurate pinpointing takes practice, and we 

suggest you practice finding and digging up 

small metal objects on your own property 

before you search other locations. 

 

Sometimes, targets are difficult to accurately 

locate due to the sweep direction. Try 

changing your sweep direction to pinpoint a 

target. 

 

Follow these steps to pinpoint a target. 

1.

 

When the detector detects a buried target, 

continue sweeping the search coil over the 

target in narrowing side-to-side motion. 

Make a visual note of the exact spot on the 

ground where the detector beeps. 

2.

 

Stop the search coil directly over this spot 

on the ground. Then move the search coil 

straight forward away from you and 

straight back toward you a couple of times.

Make a visual not of the exact spot on the 

ground there the detector beeps. 

 

Note

: Each time you use the detector in a different 

area, you must adjust DISCRIMINATION. Each 

search location presents new challenges. 

 

FALSE SIGNALS 

Because your detector is extremely sensitive, 

trash-induced signals and other sources of 

interference might cause signals that seem 

confusing. The key to handling these types of 

signals is to dig for only those targets that generate 

a strong, repeatable signal. As you sweep the search 

coil back and forth over the ground, learn to 

recognize the difference between signals that occur 

at random and signals that are stable and 

repeatable. 

 

To reduce false signals when searching very trashy 

ground, scan only a small area at a time using slow, 

short overlapping sweeps. 

 

DETECTION HINTS 

No detector is 100 percent accurate. Various 

conditions influence metal detection. The detector’s 

reaction depends on a number of things: 

z

 

The angle at which the object rests in the 

ground 

z

 

The depth of the object 

z

 

The amount of iron in the object 

z

 

The size of the object 

3.

 

Repeat Steps 1-2 at a right angle to the 

original search line, making an “X” pattern. 

The target should be directly below the “X” 

at the point of the loudest response. 

 

Note: 

z

 

If trash in an area is so heavy that you get 

false signals, slow your sweep speed and use 

shorter sweeps. 

z

 

Recently buried coins might not respond the 

same as coins buried for a long period of 

time because of oxidation. 

z

 

Some nails, nuts, bolts, and other iron 

objects (such as old bottle caps) oxidize and 

create a “halo” effect. A halo effect is caused 

by a mixture of natural elements in the 

ground and the oxidation created by 

different metals. Because of the metal 

mixtures, target signals might not be in a 

“fixed” position. This effect makes these 

objects very hard to detect accurately. (See 

“Fine-Tuning the Detector” on Page 10.) 

 

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