They are a dream to use when you buy some covers and fit them on a straight shaft even with bigger coils, I did that with my sovereign GT and the Coil Glides across the ground using the 12x8 platypus, total work of Art.What_Trigger said:Living in Stanthorpe, whereabouts you from?
Mine arrived today, so just been assembling
Cables bloody long on these suckers, I'm gathering due to been hip mount capable.
Triton, where did you mount your control box?
I mounted mine in the std location so the controls are easy to get to while learning plus it keeps the control box out of the dirt.
its tempting to mount it at the rear due to the balance factor, but the only real downside to me is the box becomes the stand, although I may try it if I'm not happy with the bungy cord.
bob said:https://www.prospectingaustralia.co.../628/1465914850_bob_s_first_detector_find.jpg
Yahoo or should I say "Eureka" it works! Today I found my first piece of gold using my detector. It was a great feeling to finally make the breakthrough. What made it most memorable were the circumstances under which it was found. With the recent rains I have resumed panning and sluicing a spot that I worked two years ago. Recently I have only been using the detector to scan my screenings pile at the end of the day. Today when I scanned the pile I got no response. With an hour of daylight left I decided to continue detecting around where I had my sluice set up. About a metre from my screenings pile I got a good clear signal. I initially thought that it was another bullet tip as I found one in my screenings pile last week. After a boot scrape and one with the pick the target was still there. A chip and a scrape gave the same result but louder. Another chip and scrape and it was out of the shallow hole. The third scoop of dirt told me that I had located the target. On top of the scoop load of gravel was a dark brown rock twice the size of a golf ball. Waving this over the detector gave a loud signal. My spot is close to a major road and sometimes some cars and trucks seem to set the detector off. Not all vehicles just some. I could hear a car through the head phones as it zoomed by, just as I was waving the rock. Curious I gave the rock a second sweep. Hardly any response. Very strange indeed. Slowly turning the rock as I swept it over the coil I noticed it gave a loud signal on one side. Now I thought that this was no ordinary hot rock. I set the rock up on a flat piece of quartz and tapped it with the flat part of my pick. It split pretty much in half. No signal from one half but the other half fairly screamed. No sign of gold so I gave it another tap and examined the remains. I could clearly see the gold this time. Success at last. I've had the detector three and a half years and dug countless bullets and other trash so it was very rewarding to finally taste success. The crazy thing is I have travelled to lots of places in Victoria detecting and I finally find my first piece in a spot that I have walked over many times sluicing and panning, just never put a detector over it. In fact today while working I would have been tromping all over it. I hope that don't have to wait three and a half years for my next piece.
Cheers Bob.
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