TTKooAu said:
I'm still waiting for my Eurotek Pro to arrive, held up in customs according to Aussie Detectors
.
Look forward to hearing how the G2 goes.
I have been using the G2 for a little while now, mainly for coin shooting more so than on goldfields. It doesn't get the depth that my explorer gets, but that is expected considering the high frequency it runs. It is a very useful detector in extremely trashy ground, and where EMI can play havoc with the explorer, almost to the point of being unusable. Thanks to its dual processors and extremely fast recovery speed, it manages to pick up coins amongst all sorts of rubbish in discrimimation mode, and still achieve respectable depth. You can also run very high sensitivity levels without it becoming unstable in most areas.
At the beach on wet sand, the G2 will successfully ground balance and operate with minimal falsing, but take it in the water itself and you will find it is a different matter. This is a very light detector, which makes it a pleasure to use for long periods, just have to remember that it runs a mono jack for when using headphones. Yes it loves aluminium bottle caps, but that is expected for a detector designed for low to med conductivity targets like gold, so digging up larger coin sounding aluminium targets are part and parcel of using this detector. Despite being designed for low conductivity targets, it still does very well on high conductivity coins such as silvers and copper/bronze coins, and you can discriminate out all pull tabs and foil targets without losing the major decimal and pre-decimal coins. I tend to just run with just iron knocked out for the beach, so as to include most gold jewellery targets.
One feature I really like is having VCO tones on high conductivity targets in discrimination mode, so you can run with no threshold, but the G2 will cut into VCO tones when over a high conductivity target like a pennies, half pennies $1, $2 and silver coins. Lower conductivity targets will give off low tones, with iron cut out altogether, depending on where the discrimination control is set at.
Going by the strength of the VCO tones, you can get a good idea of the target depth without having to rely on the screen depth meter.
For the price, and considering this detector is primarily a gold vlf, it should probably be considered as a competant all-rounder that is very capable on coinage, as well as having true beach detecting ability, unlike most gold oriented detectors.