When I first got my 4500 in Sept last year, nearly one year now, I had a training day with Gold Prospecting Australia. They suggested the following settings irrespective of coil, but this was before the new flat wind coils came out.
Deep, Enhanced, Quiet Audio, Auto Tune, V.slow to slow Motion, Audio Tone about 38, Rx as high as possible (just as threshold is unstable), use Stabilizer to quieten threshold, Signal 17, Target Volume 16 with remote speaker, Fixed, Mono (that's all I use for gold), Normal.
I've often thought Quiet Audio counter acts for the Deep setting, and wondered what the real technical difference is. My thought is that Deep punches deeper and thus it can cause more noise/instability but Quiet smooths that out and makes signals a little quieter. Perhaps someone can explain this in more technical detail.
I have used these setting with reasonable success, even with the new flat wind more sensitive coils.
In my search for improved performance I recently returned to the instruction manual and have picked up on a few finer points of adjustment, as follows:
Auto tune in fast motion then change to v.slow or slow.
Manual Tune to high frequency can be slightly more sensitive to smaller shallow gold.
Manual Tune to low frequency can give a little more depth to larger targets.
V.slow motion will allow for maximum stability.
Rx at 8 is factory preset ....... I think I push Rx too high at times, and wonder why I have noise problems. So have been trying to give in to this and wind the Rx back so I have better stability. I find early mornings and evenings I can wind the Rx right up to 13 without a problem. Instructions say a lower Rx is preferable for noisy conditions or high interference areas, and be prepared to reduce Rx if the background threshold is erratic.
Quite gives the most reduction of both ground noise and interference.
A high Audio Tone may help identify small targets from ground signals.
A low Audio Tone may allow deep targets to stand out.
Stabilizer one number below where threshold chatters.
In highly mineralised ground high Signal may make the detector appear noisy.
Target Volume can also be used to reduce or smooth out ground noise in highly mineralised soils.
All food for thought and trial.
Cheers