Welcome guest, is this your first visit?
Member
Discoveries
 
Results 1 to 9 of 9
  1. #1
    us
    Jan 2007
    Middlesex, New Jersey
    Tesoro, Fisher
    241
    1 times

    Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    Avoid digging a plug for all those iffy pulltab signals. All targets in photo were pulled out of soft soil down to 7" deep, and they came out easy. This modified bread knife works great in parks grass soft soil areas, won't penetrate dry hard soil. Makes a slit in the grass, needs a little practice to get the hang of it. Just push knife straight down and pull toward you and up, (not straight up). With accurate pinpointing some of the pulltabs and other junk seen here was snagged with the first swipe. Made from a Farberware 8" bread knife, not a knife with a long tapered point. Use a Dremel tool with metal cutting discs to cut notches in the blade, needs 7 or 8 notches. I made it for pulltab/rings signals, but was shocked when I saw what else it could pull out. Junk in the photo was pulled out during a two hour test search. It was tried on just a few coin signals and it pulled them out too, but I would use my regular digging tool when searching for old coins. The handle needs to be beefed up for a good grip when pushing down into soil, drill out the aluminum rivets to bolt on handle grip.Make this digging tool, save lawns. -improved-pullers.jpg
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Make this digging tool, save lawns. -bread-knife-pulltab-ring-puller.jpg   Make this digging tool, save lawns. -improved-pullers.jpg  

  2. #2

    Mar 2006
    Granby, CT
    455

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    Looks like a lot of damaged silver to me
    TonyinCT
    http://www.tcmetaldetectors.com

  3. #3
    Charter Member
    us
    Director-Search & Recovery Team of Oakland County.

    Aug 2005
    In Michigan now.
    Excal 1000, Sovereign GT, CZ-20, Tiger Shark, Tejon, GTI 1500, Surfmaster Pulse, CZ6a, DFX, AT PRO, many more.
    9,431
    57 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    It looks like it would work, but I wouldn't want to chance damaging a nice ring or older coin.
    (C) Sandman, 2005. All Rights Reserved.
    "TIME IS THE ONLY THING YOU NEVER GET BACK, WHY WASTE IT SWINGING A DETECTOR THAT ISN'T UP TO THE TASK."

  4. #4
    us
    Dec 2004
    Troy X5
    7,144
    4 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    All animals are equal, but some are more equal then others. -George Orwell

  5. #5
    I Dig Detecting...

    Jan 2006
    Ottawa, Ontario
    Tesoro-Amigo
    200

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    Hi Tykit, Welcome to TNet. Thanx for sharing your very innovative idea for a retrieval tool with the members. As you say, when used only on the real iffy targets, looks like it does the job. I can see, going through say, a small junky area, looking first for all the junk to pull out with this tool. Then go back over the same ground, looking this time only for the good sounds on your next pass, to recover with your normal retrieval tool.

    Knowing your machine and only going with the iffy sounds, is what makes this kool trick of yours work. You shouldn't end up damaging many good targets, seeing as you only use this kool tool, on the iffy ones. 8)

    Thanx again for sharing, dude. A thinking treasure hunter, is always a successful treasure hunter!

    Happy swinging!


    lb
    Keep on sweepin'...

    LarryB

  6. #6
    True confederate soldier

    Aug 2005
    Currituck County, NC
    Minelab
    859
    Banner Finds (1)

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    Quote Originally Posted by EDDEKALB
    Aren't those used for holding an "insect"?
    "The only two things you can truly depend upon are gravity and greed."

  7. #7
    us
    Jan 2007
    Middlesex, New Jersey
    Tesoro, Fisher
    241
    1 times

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    If anyone makes this tool, please post how it's working for you, I'd be interested to know. The thing you will find out is how easy the stuff pulls out, I guess it's because the target follows the slit. Again I only tried it in soft, moist grassy soil.

  8. #8
    Charter Member
    us
    Jun 2004
    Hurlock, Maryland
    E-TRAC, EXPLORER II, Excalibur II, IDX Pro
    1,602
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    EDDEKALB,

    Did you read the article "To probe or not to probe?", in the 2006 issue of Treasure facts. It was very informative and the author uses forceps. This technique may let you retrieve items in areas that allow detecting but not digging.

    Ed D.
    Keep detecting, Keep digging, Keep finding!

    Ed Donovan

  9. #9
    us
    "Is that a Geiger Counter?"

    Feb 2006
    South Central Upstate NY in the foothills of the headlands
    '72 RS Kit/Musketeer Advantage with 8" & 10" DD coils/Fisher F75se with 11" DD & 6.5" concentric coils/Sunray FX-1 Probe/Black Widows/Rattler/F-Point/Merlin SXL Pinpointers
    3,191
    13 times
    Metal Detecting

    Re: Make this digging tool, save lawns.

    That looks like the difference between a $300 silver coin and a $7 one. Ouch.
    We got rid of the kid - the cats were allergic.

 

 

Home | Forum | Active Topics | What's New

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

make a digging tool

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