Stainless steel

fishracepoint

Greenie
Apr 13, 2009
11
2
Rhode Island
Detector(s) used
Garrett GTAx 750, Equinox 800

clv

Hero Member
Dec 23, 2012
714
1,101
santee, ca
Detector(s) used
Current Detectors; Minelab Safari, Equinox 600
TRX Pin Pointer, Fisher 1235x
Have owned; Minelab Eureka gold,
Tesoro Compadre, White's MX5, GMT, MXT Pro,
fisher cz7a pro, go fine 20, Garret Ma
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
In all metal mode, no discrimination, and max sen?
 

OP
OP
F

fishracepoint

Greenie
Apr 13, 2009
11
2
Rhode Island
Detector(s) used
Garrett GTAx 750, Equinox 800
In all metal mode, no discrimination, and max sen?
I had it in relic mode and sen at 8. I guess it might have been a cheap import screw and the high mineral content in my soil?
It has happened 2 times to me.

OK I just set it to zero desc, max sen, did not ground bal and checked a known 303 stainless bolt and it did see it. I had to get about 3" from the coil but at least it did see it.

thanks for the sanity check
 

mo dirt diggin

Sr. Member
Sep 3, 2012
265
36
Souteast Missouri
Detector(s) used
Whites DFX, 950 Coil, 4x6 eclipse coil, DX-1, Bullseye 2 pinpointer, Pro pointer, Lesche Sampson 31inch.
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Double thanks . It helped me out also.
 

clv

Hero Member
Dec 23, 2012
714
1,101
santee, ca
Detector(s) used
Current Detectors; Minelab Safari, Equinox 600
TRX Pin Pointer, Fisher 1235x
Have owned; Minelab Eureka gold,
Tesoro Compadre, White's MX5, GMT, MXT Pro,
fisher cz7a pro, go fine 20, Garret Ma
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
To turn steel to stainless steel they ad nickle and a few others but mostly nickle, so they will read in the gold/aluminum/nickle area.
There are a lot of grades of S.S, 18-8 being the most common. 18-8 has the least nickle and is still slightly magnetic and will rust. It just rusts a littler slower than regular steel.
 

Carl-NC

Bronze Member
Mar 19, 2003
1,871
1,359
Washington
Detector(s) used
Custom Designs and Prototypes
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
There is no one "stainless steel" alloy, even in cutlery and utensils. Some stainless items are attracted by a magnet, some are not. Some hit well on a metal detector, some are almost impossible to detect. It can also depend on the metal detector, especially the frequency. It is possible to come up with an alloy that would make even a large knife invisible to a walk-through security metal detector.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top