Welcome guest, is this your first visit?
Member
Discoveries
 
Results 1 to 6 of 6
  1. #1
    us
    Dec 2011
    princeton tx.
    Bounty Hunter 1
    18
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Vintage Bounty Hunter 1

    Greetings from North Central Texas, I was sold a B/H 1 detector in almost mint condition for the sum of $5 at a local thrift store. I was told it might have issues and would not detect metal, sounded like my type hobby due to the fact that i had a legit excuse for not finding riches and happiness buried in my backyard. long story short, the tuning pot was dirty and the coil wire had come loose from the board. i hit it with a toothbrush and some solder and when i fired it up that thing made the most god-awful ruckus i have heard since my son left home. i was completly, madly in love from that moment.

    when i was a kid i remember tagging along with a neighbor who had a Bounty hunter and used to mine the school yard on the weekends, i always wanted one but never ran across the right deal until now. this detector is so cool looking that it reminds me of a 1950's sci-fi movie prop. i used it for real this past weekend and after alot of knob twisting, a trip to the store for fresh batteries and a beer i had some luck of sorts. i live on a very old property that has been a working farm since the 1840"s and has only recently been built up. there are 2 or 3 sites where a house or barn stood as well as well's and old dump sites. when i started i had no idea what to do except twist knobs and sweep back and fourth. first find was ax head about 6in deep. i was stoked that it really worked and 10 hours later i had a sore back, sore girlfriend, and a pile of iron and a few pennies. great fun. if anyone has info about this unit or tips on using it please reply.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Vintage Bounty Hunter 1-im000007.jpg   Vintage Bounty Hunter 1-im000008.jpg   Vintage Bounty Hunter 1-im000009.jpg   Vintage Bounty Hunter 1-im000010.jpg  

  2. #2
    Charter Member
    us
    MINELAB XS-2 Pro ....... XTERRA 305 ....... EXPLORER SE PRO

    Dec 2003
    Joliett Schuylkill County
    35,548
    145 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Vintage Bounty Hunter 1

    Thats an Oldie.

    Probably close to the age of the relics you found

    Welcome & Congrats
    discriminate out Spike TV and American Diggers !

  3. #3
    us
    Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

    Mar 2008
    32°46′58″N 96°48′14″W
    My other detector is a helicopter
    1,560
    3 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Vintage Bounty Hunter 1

    Here ya go:

    http://www.whiteriverprep.com/vintag...hI_II_III.html

    That's your manual and that site has everything you want to know about vintage BH

    I have a few of the old BFO's myself and still love to use em

    If you find me upside down, Roll me over.

    "I dream of a world where chickens can cross roads       
          without having their motives questioned..."

  4. #4
    us
    Nov 2011
    Williamsburg, Virginia
    Bounty Hunter Time Ranger
    26
    Metal Detecting

    Re: Vintage Bounty Hunter 1

    Nice old Bounty Hunter.

  5. #5

    Apr 2012
    1
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting
    Quote Originally Posted by Jeep View Post
    The website whiteriverprep.com is no longer around... fail. Is there another place to find such a manual?

  6. #6

    Oct 2005
    XLT, Whites D.F., Treasure Baron, Deepstar, Goldquest, Beachscan, T.D.I., Sovereign, 2x Nautilus, various Arado's, Ixcus Diver, Altek Quadtone, T2, Beach Hunter I.D, GS 5 pulse, Searchman 2 and severa
    1,278
    18 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting
    I never used this model but they all work just about the same. The BFO (Beat Frequency Oscillator) design has two oscillators that have to be adjusted together. In the case of your commercial detector one will be fixed and you "tune" the other to get them almost to the same radio frequency. When this is acheived and metal is brought within range of the coil then an audio tone is produced.

    I don't know this model but I would assume one knob is on/off and volume and the other the tuner. The tuner knob should be set to a near zero output with a slight motor boating noise. It may well be that there's a low or no volume area where the knob is centralised. If so you may be able to turn it both left and right from this position and hear the audio beat start to pick up. If your detector is set up like this then its most likely the knob should be turned clockwise to gain the audio output. If you turn it the other way to the next audio point then the detector will null as the coil approaches metal which you don't want.

    Even if working correctly the depth is not going to be that great....nothing like even a cheap modern detector so you will soon want to upgrade. I would hold on to the BFO though as there's going to come a point where more are going to want something from the history of detecting and the value will creep up. Your's is in exceptional condition, works and has got to be from the early 60's.

 

 

Sponsors

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Search tags for this page

bounty hunter ii or iii battery wire locations

Click on a term to search for related topics.
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.1.3