Score......I think?

MrMikeJackie

Bronze Member
Nov 3, 2013
1,751
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Long Island
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CTX 3030,
Xp Deus,
That's it, I'm done.
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civil_war22

Relic Recovery Specialist
Dec 5, 2008
3,215
2,810
NW Arkansas
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Fisher F75 SE/LTD2, minelab Etrac, whites classic id, spectrum xlt, fisher f7, fisher 1266, king of all Tesoro Cibola, Tesoro Vaquero, Fisher 1280-X, minelab equinox, Fisher F75+ Garrett AT MAX
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
Dang that's a good price. They can be super tuned to really go deep. It doesn't take opening it up to get it super tuned. I haven't done it in a while so just look it up or one of the guys on here probably remember
 

civil_war22

Relic Recovery Specialist
Dec 5, 2008
3,215
2,810
NW Arkansas
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Fisher F75 SE/LTD2, minelab Etrac, whites classic id, spectrum xlt, fisher f7, fisher 1266, king of all Tesoro Cibola, Tesoro Vaquero, Fisher 1280-X, minelab equinox, Fisher F75+ Garrett AT MAX
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
When I first got mine before I knew about super tuning it I was fairly impressed with my finds but once you get the knack of it and super tune it you will be amazed at what that little "sleeper" machine will find for you
 

Terry Soloman

Gold Member
May 28, 2010
19,422
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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
Super tuning just means maxing out all your controls. It's complete Bullmanure. Just run your sensitivity as high as you can in your soil. It's a great machine!:skullflag:
 

civil_war22

Relic Recovery Specialist
Dec 5, 2008
3,215
2,810
NW Arkansas
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Fisher F75 SE/LTD2, minelab Etrac, whites classic id, spectrum xlt, fisher f7, fisher 1266, king of all Tesoro Cibola, Tesoro Vaquero, Fisher 1280-X, minelab equinox, Fisher F75+ Garrett AT MAX
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
Hey its gotta have a sales pitch. Remember the Vornado.. Boosts MPG up to 210% :laughing7:
 

DiggerinVA

Bronze Member
Sep 16, 2013
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Shenandoah Valley, Virginia
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GPX5000, AT Gold, AT Pro, Whites TDI, Bandido 2 umax, Tejon, Vaquero, Deus 2, ORX and Legend
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All Treasure Hunting
Supertuning also requires cranking the Threshold way up.....does increase max depth but you will pay for it with extra falsing, instability, reduced disc accuracy and a useless pinpoint mode that will bust your eardrums if you do happen to hit the pinpoint button while supertuned. I suggest using Terry's advice. Also, I think you got a heck of a deal.....I would have jumped all over that deal.
 

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civil_war22

Relic Recovery Specialist
Dec 5, 2008
3,215
2,810
NW Arkansas
🥇 Banner finds
1
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Detector(s) used
Fisher F75 SE/LTD2, minelab Etrac, whites classic id, spectrum xlt, fisher f7, fisher 1266, king of all Tesoro Cibola, Tesoro Vaquero, Fisher 1280-X, minelab equinox, Fisher F75+ Garrett AT MAX
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
Don't you just love pinpointing when super tuned;)
 

pinenut

Bronze Member
Mar 15, 2016
1,024
1,363
where bigfoot roams
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Various Tesoro - mostly Bandido II μMAX
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Mister Mike, you stole it at $150!

As for advice, you didn't mention which coil you got with it, but if you hunt trashy spots, I'd recommend getting a 5.75" concentric to play with.

When you first take it to where you plan on hunting, try pushing in the pinpoint button and setting your threshold to a low and steady hum; don't try any supertune stuff...
With threshold set to low hum, hold the pinpoint in (now you're in threshold based all metal), and find youself a clean section of ground with no metal. Once you find the clean spot, hold the pinpoint in and pump the coil up and down over the ground, from a foot above, down to an inch above (as on an adjustable ground balance machine). Take note as to whether the threshold tone goes up, down, or stays about the same... Next, with the button still pushed in, switch the frequency to each position, and choose the one where the tone is either about the same, or gets quieter going toward the soil (still pumping machine and coil up and down, from a foot up, down to about an inch above ground). If tone stays the same when doing this, the balance in all-metal is said to be neutral, if tone gets louder going toward the soil, then it's positive, and if it gets quieter, it's negative. You want to choose the frequency switch position that's closest to neutral or (preferably) a little negative, for best target response. This frequency switch isn't intended to be used this way, but each position will change the ground balance slightly. What I just described is the only way to get a little closer to ground balancing a standard, unmodified Cibola, and may give a little (though very little) more depth. But, it should also help with target response. This will not make a big difference, but may help...

Next, using that same clean spot of ground, drop a quarter there, and pass your coil over that quarter, and make note of how it sounds. Adjust your sensitivity so that quarter sounds the clearest and loudest... Then turn it up a little higher. With some practice, I think you may see that maximum sensitivity may be too high to get the cleanest response on that quarter, unless soil mineralization is quite low. Run sensitivity as high as you can, while still getting a clean, solid response on the quarter. Of course, a quarter in the soil is a different critter, but make sure you don't run sensitivity too high, causing a quarter's response to fall off. With some practise, I think you'll know what I mean.
On the discrimination, run it as low as you can stand. In trashy spots that'll be tougher, as constantly digging junk will discourage you. In really trashy spots, I run just past tab, getting all cents (zinc and real ones..), dimes and quarters. If the area isn't too trashy, I try to run right between foil and nickel, hoping for nickels and all the other coins, and...those ever elusive gold goodies.
Remember, this is the internet and to take everything you read as being potential BS... Try it though, and make your own decesion. Seems to work for me.
^_^
 

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doggoneitdignit

Hero Member
Oct 2, 2016
747
374
Canada
Detector(s) used
Current: Vaquero,Compadre,T2,300i, ML 440V, and Simplex+
Past:Whites 4000 D Series 3, Radio Shack 3001 Micronta
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Just got a Tesoro Cibola in mint condition for $150. I think that's a good price. Anyhow, any advise? I hear I can "super tune" this thing to go deep. Do I have to open it up or anything. Thanks, Mike


I know this post is old, but you did very good only one I saw that was looking at and considering was close but not what you paid for was for Tesoro Cibola US $192.50 12 Bids.

Well done!
 

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