Yesterday was a challenge.
The site I chose to detect was the nosiest one I have ever been on.
There were a minimum of 10 - 12 hits with every swing of the coil.
99% of which were small iron objects.
And at no point during the entire day did the iron reject symbol ever leave the bottom right of the display.
And that was with no discrimination. Dig a hole anywhere and the pinpointer would sound off on the soil alone.
Needless to say the planet was not saved. Brass items were few and far apart. Does anyone know if that is the English broad arrow on the item on the left? That was the question I asked on another forum. I will update that later on. Gas was not covered on this trip. And no silver was found. This is the only coin with any age to it. The day was not a total loss though.
History up close is this.
Another friction fuse for the 64 pound cannons that stood at this point to protect against the expected Russian invasion.
The site I chose to detect was the nosiest one I have ever been on.
There were a minimum of 10 - 12 hits with every swing of the coil.
99% of which were small iron objects.
And at no point during the entire day did the iron reject symbol ever leave the bottom right of the display.
And that was with no discrimination. Dig a hole anywhere and the pinpointer would sound off on the soil alone.
Needless to say the planet was not saved. Brass items were few and far apart. Does anyone know if that is the English broad arrow on the item on the left? That was the question I asked on another forum. I will update that later on. Gas was not covered on this trip. And no silver was found. This is the only coin with any age to it. The day was not a total loss though.
History up close is this.
Another friction fuse for the 64 pound cannons that stood at this point to protect against the expected Russian invasion.
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