Heres How Canadian Coins Are Read By AT And ACE Series Detectors

John-Edmonton

Silver Member
Mar 21, 2005
4,401
3,953
Canada
Detector(s) used
Garrett- Master Hunter CX,Infinium, 1350, 2500, ACE 150-water converted 250, GTA 500,1500 Scorpion, AT Pro
Here's How Canadian Coins Are Read By AT And ACE Series Detectors

cancoins.jpg





All Garrett Metal Detectors are designed and manufactured in Garland Texas, and specifically tuned for US coinage. They are also very capable of detecting Canadian clad.....but you have to change your technique when searching for them. They usually don't read where the US coins read for the equivalent coinage ie pennies, nickles, dimes, quarters, loonies and toonies, unless they are of the older silver variety (pre 1968 ) or older pennies made from solid copper (1996 or older). Having said that, here's how to identify common newer coins from canada.

These readings explained below are found using the AT Pro in PRO Mode, Zero discrimination, Iron disc set at 40 with the iron audio turned on. The same results will be found on the AT GOLD In Disk 1.


PENNIES

Older pennies, up to the middle 1990's will read in the penny icon, or with a VDI in the 80's. Now the newer strikes, can be made of metal or zinc plated with copper. These are harder to ID as pennies, especially when the copper coating begins to wear off. But, expect them to read as a steduy VDI reading of 74 +/- about 2%. Others will read in the high 70's and lower 80's. The key is where the VDI numbers read MOST of the time. If you decider to NOT dig pennies for whatever reason, expect to miss some silver rings and 10K gold rings.

NICKLES

They usually give a softer sound with a VDI reading at 50 +/- 2% and remain there. Square pull tabs give a harsher sound and often times reamain at 53. Gold is common in this area +/- 10% with a consistent softer tone.

DIMES

Older silver dimes, (pre 1968 ) or older will read as silver and read in the lower to mid 80's. However, if they are beyond about 6 inches in depth, they may start to read as junk. Use your common sense rule that if it is deep, it is probably old. Now freshly dropped dimes will read loud and allow the VDI numbers to bounce around the 60's to the 90's. With the IRON AUDIO turned on, they will grunt (low iron) and give a nice loud sound in the 80's -90's. Dig them, as they might also be a quarter. Older dimes tend to fluctuate in the 40's to 70's with the odd spike to the 80's.


Quarters

Pre 1968 quarters were silver and will read in the 80's consistantly. New fresh dropped quarters give a loud signal, with a VDI bouncing back and forth between 30's - 70's. You will eventually learn their distinctive audio. Older (not silver) quarters tend to bounce back and forth around the 70's to 80's. They also give off a loud signal.

Loonies

Give off a very loud audio bouncing back and forth 70's to the 80's.

Toonies

Give off a loud signal in the 70's and can sometimes give off a spike to the 90's.


Some results will vary if detecting to sanded tot lots or areas with higher soil mineralization. The soil in my areas is basically low to moderate. Good luck, and if you discover any other good tricks for detecting Canadian clad, please comment.
 

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Goldmoon

Jr. Member
May 6, 2012
47
26
BC
Detector(s) used
Garrett AT Pro, Garrett Ace 350, Ironclad "Viking" Digger
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
Thanks for posting! This can be such a challenge. Pretty much when I get an insane signal I almost know it's a newer canadian coin with the AT pro. Sometimes it just gets tiring to dig them all lol.

For nickels, I usually get jumps from 40-55
 

SaskSteve

Jr. Member
May 12, 2013
55
27
Saskatchewan
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Here's How Canadian Coins Are Read By AT And ACE Series Detectors

Thanks for the post John. Those readings seem right on par with what I've found as well. What does your ATP ground balance at out your way?
 

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John-Edmonton

John-Edmonton

Silver Member
Mar 21, 2005
4,401
3,953
Canada
Detector(s) used
Garrett- Master Hunter CX,Infinium, 1350, 2500, ACE 150-water converted 250, GTA 500,1500 Scorpion, AT Pro
Thanks for the post John. Those readings seem right on par with what I've found as well. What does your ATP ground balance at out your way?

Around 85-87 in the soil, 91 in the lakes.
 

SaskSteve

Jr. Member
May 12, 2013
55
27
Saskatchewan
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Here's How Canadian Coins Are Read By AT And ACE Series Detectors

Sounds like the same type of soil we have here in Sask. Thanks for the great post John.
 

Bquamb

Hero Member
Dec 29, 2014
561
511
Vancouver Island
Detector(s) used
CTX 3030, EQ 800, AT-Pro, Xterra-505
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Im always High 90's here.

Parks and lawns are 90-93
Lakes 88-93
In water 90-95
salt water beaches 93-98

It's really tricky with how mineralized our soil is here... Aughta find something good one of these days!
 

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