Bit of a miserable day today, but headed out anyway to try my luck at a new spot I had been researching. Upon unpacking the Deus from its case, I realised that I had left the main control box at home, probably not a bad thing due to the rain, so I ran with just the WS4's for the arvo and did some "wiggle back the coil" pinpointing practice.
Initially most of the site came up with nothing but a ton of iron signals, and not many good non-ferrous targets in between. So I headed a bit further away from the site and discovered a fair bit of broken china and glass lying around in the topsoil.
After initially running with the 11" coil in the junkier areas, I swapped back to the 13x11" for a bit more coverage over the less junkier ground. For a large coil it sure has no problems picking out the smaller non-ferrous targets, very happy with that purchase so far.
First good target was an Excelsior button which held some promise for the ground I was on, so I started gridding and the targets started to flow. I had a good variety of buttons, including Austrailan Military Forces, The Alma button, another two Excelsiors and a Suspender button. A good high tone target close to the surface proved to be an ornate silver pendant of sorts, not really sure what it came off. By far the best find of the day was quite a faint high tone due to sitting on edge, but was overjoyed to find an Edward VII Coronation medallion come out of the hole in pretty good condition. It appears to have been gold gilded at one stage.
The large copper tag is from Oakamoor in the UK, and belongs to Thomas Boltons copperworks - they supplied copper wire for the first transatlantic telegraph cable. The smaller broken copper disc if "Colonial Made Wire Netting - Sydney, NSW", from around the late 1800's era. Other items included a fob watch back, ornate handles, tea strainer, buckles, harmonica parts etc etc.
Still more ground to cover there, though looks like the site has already been hit previously on the coin front, the site would be a common target for local detectorists.
Stick and a coil for the day