Frozen Beach

Fizzle

Greenie
Jan 7, 2019
19
46
New England
Detector(s) used
XP Deus
Tesoro Silver Umax
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Aug 20, 2009
12,824
7,899
New Hampshire
Detector(s) used
Garret Master hunter Cx Plus
Primary Interest:
Other
sand freezes also when its went.youll be digging chunks of sand,not loose sand.
 

vferrari

Silver Member
Jul 19, 2015
4,910
8,377
Near Ground Zero for Insanity
Detector(s) used
XP Deus with HF/x35 Coils and Mi6 Pinpointer/ML Equinox 600/800/ML Tarsacci MDT 8000 GPX 4800/Garrett ATX/Fisher F75 DST/Tek G2+/Delta/Whites MXT/Nokta Simplex/Garrett Carrot
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Any of the modes are fine in the dry sand. I use Deus fast and set frequency up to at least 18 khz to get jewelry (higher frequencies are better for gold and small jewelry and you will still hit high conductive coins plenty deep in the sand). If you are going to detect the dry sand, you can use pretty much any mode that will run stable. You should use some sort of sand scoop thst let's sand fall away leaving the target in the scoop for target recovery when detecting the beach, it makes recovery easier, trying to find a target in the sand with a digging tool and a pinpointer gets old pretty fast as you will want to recover all targets in order to learn what both trash and keeper targets sound like. As far as reading the beach is concerned, in the off season it is a lot harder to find any lingering "fresh" drops around concession stands, lifeguard stands, beach entrances and towel lines. Your best bet is looking for older drops on the tide line where the surf has made cuts and has stripped off the sand. Time your trip to get there before low tide so you can follow the tide out, if you can. In the wet sand, switch to beach ground balance for stability in the higher salt concentrations of wet sand and adjust GB setting manually and turn sensitivity down as necessary to get stability (i.e., minimal chatter). Wet beach mode is just Deus Fast with GB set to beach. HTH HH
 

Last edited:

boss driver

Full Member
Dec 9, 2012
172
103
Detector(s) used
Dues, AT Pro, Tesoro Sand Shark, Excal II
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Any tips on reactivity and silencer in the dry sand?
 

Last edited:

vferrari

Silver Member
Jul 19, 2015
4,910
8,377
Near Ground Zero for Insanity
Detector(s) used
XP Deus with HF/x35 Coils and Mi6 Pinpointer/ML Equinox 600/800/ML Tarsacci MDT 8000 GPX 4800/Garrett ATX/Fisher F75 DST/Tek G2+/Delta/Whites MXT/Nokta Simplex/Garrett Carrot
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Unless there is really thick trash causing masking, there is no need to run reactivity higher than 2 and 1 should be fine. Since I am not concerned about masking, wouldn't have a problem running silencer up few notches (2 or 3) which helps break up rusty bottlecap tones that otherwise sound like quarters.
 

boss driver

Full Member
Dec 9, 2012
172
103
Detector(s) used
Dues, AT Pro, Tesoro Sand Shark, Excal II
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Thanks, I’ll give it a try. Been running at 2 with -1 silencer. Haven’t had much luck with gold jewelry.
 

vferrari

Silver Member
Jul 19, 2015
4,910
8,377
Near Ground Zero for Insanity
Detector(s) used
XP Deus with HF/x35 Coils and Mi6 Pinpointer/ML Equinox 600/800/ML Tarsacci MDT 8000 GPX 4800/Garrett ATX/Fisher F75 DST/Tek G2+/Delta/Whites MXT/Nokta Simplex/Garrett Carrot
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Based on the detectors in your profile, I probably am already telling you what you already know, but you need to read the beach to figure out where the gold likely will be and that is typically in the water or severely eroded parts of the beach. Fresh gold drops are rare in the dry sand because people tend to mostly lose their gold bling in the water when their fingers and wrists shrink in the cold water. Your Sand Shark and Excal II will outperform the Deus in the water and even the wet salt sand. Good luck.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top