THINKING ABOUT MAKING A SAND SCOOP

Terry Soloman

Gold Member
May 28, 2010
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White Plains, New York
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Nokta Makro Legend// Pulsedive// Minelab GPZ 7000// Vanquish 540// Minelab Pro Find 35// Dune Kraken Sandscoop// Grave Digger Tools Tombstone shovel & Sidekick digger// Bunk's Hermit Pick
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Just BUY a good scoop. You'll save time, and in the end, money. :skullflag:
 

Xraywolf

Silver Member
Feb 28, 2005
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MI USA
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Ace 400, AT Pro, equinox 800, Simplex,Vanquish 540
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Are you a skilled metal worker with the tools necessary to bend/form/punch/shape/cut/weld metal ?

If you were, I assume you wouldn't be asking so I would also buy one too. Anything an amateur could make is bound to disappoint, and quickly.
 

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Tom_in_CA

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Mar 23, 2007
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Terry and x-ray wolf are right. Any time and energy spent to make a home-made scoop will .... in the end ... not be worth it. Unless you just really groove on metal-fab working and want to tinker. Because what's commercially available on an industrial scale (mass production) has brought the price down to where it's not really worth making one's own.

If you want to customize something more beneficial, consider this setup:

 

GA_Boy

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Jul 30, 2006
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Jefferson, Ga
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BH LRP
1265X,
GoldBug II
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thinking galvanized. would it still rust ? where to begin ? thoughts ! suggestions ? thanks
As with digging tools, I think yo may need more than one. For instance, Underwater and wet sand I see most folks using a metal one that is sturdy.
Since my detectors are only good in dry sand, I use a plastic hand scoop that I got long ago from Kellyco to go with my detector. Since then, plus I got older, I added a Wooden handle to it with plastic ties and Kwik weld, hence, no metal parts to beep. When I get a signal that I want to did I load up a scoop of dry sand and run the detector over it.
That way I don't have to dump, scatter or search with my hand to tell if the FIND is in the scoop.
You can fab a metal or a non-metallic scoop from many containers. Just use your imagination and available stuff you have on hand. Plastic coffee jugs with holes or use a metal one gallon tomato can. Grain scoops are good but you have to drill holes in whatever you decide to build.

Marvin
 

ChampFerguson/TN

Bronze Member
Nov 22, 2013
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TN
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Minelab Safari .......... Minelab Excalibur II ....... ........Minelab CTX 3030
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Metal Detecting
Last thing I'd want is to discourage someone from tinkering but everyone's right: it doesn't pay unless you are a pro and already have the tools/materials on hand. That said, there IS a certain satisfaction to having something you made yourself.


fwiw, I made my own and it worked great but didn't hold up as well as a good model.
 

AlienLifeForm

Bronze Member
Jan 31, 2010
1,589
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DFW Texas
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Minelab E-TRAC, Garrett ProPointer, Lesche Digger
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The million dollar question is: Can you do it at work on the clock with their materials? :laughing7:
 

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