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Hi everyone (WA questions)

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Ok I hope I am not going to be too cheeky but here goes I am planning to head to WA in next few months and I am asking for anyone to advise me on what I should take in regards to being in the pilbara and Kimberly's I will be out in the bush for six weeks at a time so um yeah and what might be the better detector for the ground and did I read right no power tools ??
 
This might sound rude but if you have to ask such super basic questions then you really shouldnt be going bush for "6 weeks at a time" .

Do you realise that if going for 6w you are going to be towing a trailer? So your car can carry 4litres/day water x 42 days =160 litres per person minimum? Plus 6w food, 6w fuel, which unless you are not moving at all is gonna be a conservative 1hour every 2 days so 24hrs driving worth so prob 300 litres fuel needed ,on top of your main there-n-back-again requirements! So with just fuel, food and water for 2 people you are +600kg.

6w at a time out bush isnt a detecting holiday but a serious odyssey requiring major planning in its own right.

Suggest start smaller like being no more than 2 hrs out of town, do 6 days and then back to town on the 7th for a pub meal & restock/sanity break. If you can do that 6x back to back then you might be ready to do 2-3w. After a couple of those you will be ready for 6w knowing what you NEED to take and equally important what you really dont need at all. You will answer your own question:)

The only detectors you should consider are the 7000,6000,5000,4500 and 2300 as these will def handle the ground. If they cant then nothing will.

If you are swinging 8 hrs a day then the 6000 is by far the most attractive but if you have to ask the "which detector" question then unless you hit the motherlode then you wont be spending 6w x8hrs at a time detecting as no-one goes from not having a detector to Pro level hours in one hit.

Love your enthusiasm though.
 
Thanks I know they were simple questions thank you for the input I realize that some of the things i was asking was complete newbie questions but I have also lived in the bush before that was why I was asking questions about detectors never used one before and what sort of tools I should be taking to minimise weight and be successful as a hobby again thank you again for the advice I will take that under advisement (any other advice would be appreciated it's been a long time since I have been out bush so I know alot has changed)
 
Thanks I know they were simple questions thank you for the input I realize that some of the things i was asking was complete newbie questions but I have also lived in the bush before that was why I was asking questions about detectors never used one before and what sort of tools I should be taking to minimise weight and be successful as a hobby again thank you again for the advice I will take that under advisement (any other advice would be appreciated it's been a long time since I have been out bush so I know alot has changed)
Detector.6k if you can afford

Spare battery x 2. Need 2 for dawn to dusk detecting.

12v charger cable x 2

Spare coil of diff size to main.

Audio of your choice. Wireless nicest but also have backup wired option

Harness with scoop, PLB,water bottle,gps,compass,phone maps etc etc - read Survival thread.

600-900mm prospecting pick. 600 much easier to carry around all day. Buy quality.

Spare pick. Can be 400mm bunnings. If you lose/break your main pick and dont have another then game over.

Long handle shovel which you will have anyway on 4wd

riggers or sailing gloves

you can take pan,screen trowel if you like but plenty of folk dont as water too precious and no dry blow skill

Small crowbar .600-900mm

Dont need dolly pot. Either bring speccies home and dolly there or just crush on your steel jacking plate

Zen attitude.
 
Detector.6k if you can afford

Spare battery x 2. Need 2 for dawn to dusk detecting.

12v charger cable x 2

Spare coil of diff size to main.

Audio of your choice. Wireless nicest but also have backup wired option

Harness with PLB,water bottle,gps,compass,phone maps etc etc - read Survival thread.

600-900mm prospecting pick. 600 much easier to carry around all day. Buy quality.

Spare pick. Can be 400mm bunnings. If you lose/break your main pick and dont have another then game over.

Long handle shovel which you will have anyway on 4wd

riggers or sailing gloves

you can take pan,screen trowel if you like but plenty of folk dont as water too precious and no dry blow skill

Small crowbar .600-900mm

Dont need dolly pot. Either bring speccies home and dolly there or just crush on your steel jacking plate

Zen attitude.
Thank you for that information i will definitely keep that on board any further advice would be appreciated so thank you again
 
that's all i do 6 days at a time ,after 6 days of a wet washer and arm pits and a#$%holes, on the 7 day it is good to hit the showers and have a recharge
washing done, shower ,tucker restock and pubgrub all recharged and ready for the next week
I write a list of everything i want to take then cross off what i don't kneed
pack lighter
 
don't forget to get a Miners right for WA, and it is very handy to get the Trilobite map system for your mobile phone, it works via satellite on your phone so just update it when in town then it's good to go. It has all the mining leases for WA on it like live and pending of all types so no excuse to be where your not meant to be

https://trilobite.solutions/maps/
 

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