Pinpointing 101

SirWalterRaleigh

Sr. Member
Jul 29, 2015
318
334
Raleigh, North Carolina
Detector(s) used
Garrett AT Pro,
Garrett Ace 350
Garrett pinpointer
Lesche 85 and Sampson t-handle 31"
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
yep, i broke my first black garrett by using it to pry and dig. Learned a hard lesson.
 

OP
OP
P

Patriot 1776

Supporting Vendor
Supporting Vendor
Dec 9, 2014
442
474
MA
Detector(s) used
Whites DFX and V3i, Garrett AT Pro , ACE 350, Minelab CTX
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
If this is your blog, I think it could be improved by describing the actual process for pinpointing, and the how the individual models vary with regard to the process.

For example, Pistol type pinpointers (like the bounty hunter) really only detect at the tip, whereas other types, like the Garrett ProPointer, detect all along the shaft. The difference is primarily in the speed of the recovery. If you have to point and stab everything, it's much more time consuming than if you lay a pin pointer across the ground and "swipe" for first detection capability, then narrow by using the tip. You sort of covered this with the ways people use the pinpointers, but if you have an "instructable" you'll find more people link to the blog.

Regarding the stabbing technique, I see MANY people using Garrett's out in the field who are using the stabbing technique and take forever to find targets that way. Swiping with the shaft is the fastest way to initially isolate a target, especially when near the surface, then narrow the location with the tip.

Other methods include "drawing a grid" over an area (basically use the tip to draw strips of lines, rather than "stabbing" at spots). Not quite as fast as whole shaft swiping, but nearly so, if you've already isolated the area with a wiggle method on a coil or having used the pinpoint function of the main rig...

Basically... if the blog is more useful for learning how, rather than just noting it's important, I think you'll get more hits on the page, as people link and direct others to it. Cheers!

Some other edits I'd recommend:
A lot of seasoned detectorists damage their pinpointer by digging with them. So, don’t do that.
While this may be true, many "seasoned "detectorists use a tip guard to prevent any wear on the pinpointer. I regularly push dirt out of the way. My first two pinpointers were practically angled at the tip after just 6-7 months. Now, I use a couple millimeter rubber cap on the end (cost me like $.75), and there's ZERO wear now... Any rubbing of the tip on dirt will eventually wear it down... A cheap cap is so much easier than purchasing dips, whole pinpointer sheaths, or vacuum sealing (i've done them all, btw!)

You might also describe how using a pinpointer results in MUCH less damage to turf, as it doesn't require running handsful of dirt across a coil. It's much easier to find the object IN the hole, than to take out dirt to find it.

Cheers!

Skippy

Skipp SH13
Your correct, I think your advice is correct
I am sure they will read your great advice
thank you
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top