G
Guest
G'day
I have dug numerous deep rubbish targets with the sdc so I would expect that if you manage to get your coil over a deep gold target in the same sort of ground you would more and likely hear it or maybe just sense that you might have something, the sdc is a purpose built machine and is awesome on small gold that's its real strength and not outright depth, I use the sdc in conjunction with the 4500 as a patch hunter and also sniffing about rough ground, switch from one to the other as conditions and finds dictate.
Air tests don't take into account things like soil mineralisation and also the halo effect on buried targets, I would say that doing an air test simply verifies that the machine is working and the coil is ok, the level of soil mineralisation and other factors like soil temperature and also moisture content play a huge part in whether you can hear a target or not, so its not all about the detector or the coil as some inexperienced users think, I have dug several nuggets over an ounce in weight in one area that were very vague responses from the surface with the 4500 and 14" coil, and the deepest would have maybe been 8-10 inches down maximum, in other places where the mineralisation is different the target response would have blown you out of your socks, this is why I believe that some areas are well cleaned out and others still hide random deep nuggets, the more difficult the ground the better the chance of scoring a good nugget if you take your time detecting them.
There is also the little known Halo effect, this is when the target appears larger to the detector than it turns out to be when you dig it up, the target in situ and its more particularly ferrous targets will have a halo of decomposing iron particles that have leached out of the object into the soil around it, people believe that this will also occur with gold nuggets in situ but I am unsure whether the halo effect is caused by leaching out impurities from the nugget or by the phenomenon of gold growing in situ and attracting micron sized gold particles into itself or simply by the action of bacteria, scientifically termed as bug nuggets if you want to look into it further.
cheers
stayyerAU
I have dug numerous deep rubbish targets with the sdc so I would expect that if you manage to get your coil over a deep gold target in the same sort of ground you would more and likely hear it or maybe just sense that you might have something, the sdc is a purpose built machine and is awesome on small gold that's its real strength and not outright depth, I use the sdc in conjunction with the 4500 as a patch hunter and also sniffing about rough ground, switch from one to the other as conditions and finds dictate.
Air tests don't take into account things like soil mineralisation and also the halo effect on buried targets, I would say that doing an air test simply verifies that the machine is working and the coil is ok, the level of soil mineralisation and other factors like soil temperature and also moisture content play a huge part in whether you can hear a target or not, so its not all about the detector or the coil as some inexperienced users think, I have dug several nuggets over an ounce in weight in one area that were very vague responses from the surface with the 4500 and 14" coil, and the deepest would have maybe been 8-10 inches down maximum, in other places where the mineralisation is different the target response would have blown you out of your socks, this is why I believe that some areas are well cleaned out and others still hide random deep nuggets, the more difficult the ground the better the chance of scoring a good nugget if you take your time detecting them.
There is also the little known Halo effect, this is when the target appears larger to the detector than it turns out to be when you dig it up, the target in situ and its more particularly ferrous targets will have a halo of decomposing iron particles that have leached out of the object into the soil around it, people believe that this will also occur with gold nuggets in situ but I am unsure whether the halo effect is caused by leaching out impurities from the nugget or by the phenomenon of gold growing in situ and attracting micron sized gold particles into itself or simply by the action of bacteria, scientifically termed as bug nuggets if you want to look into it further.
cheers
stayyerAU