The procedure is pretty simple, grab a bunch of your dirt and pile it up then pump your chosen coil over it while adjusting the GB in tiny increments until it is quiet going both up and down...or as close to silent or even tones up and down as you can get.
Pretty simple but still dangerous for the unskilled...a little to far on the adjustment and you can easily brick the thing and make it unusable and should consider using it for a doorstop instead or those pots can be real fragile and break more easily than you can imagine.
Not to mention it you don't ground yourself even the smallest amount of static electricity can possibly fry parts of your circuit board.
Your property so do what you think you need to do but forget about sending it back to Tesoro if you screw up...a well loved option that is no longer available.
For a long time Tesoro has had their own opinions on this and their idea of "Optimum Ground Balancing".
First, you have to understand a little about ground balancing using ferrite rods which I believe is, or used to be the way manufactures set a GB on their products...especially on pre-set GB detectors.
George Payne explained it pretty well, here...
https://www.findmall.com/read.php?18,1766646
They might use different methods nowadays, for all I know, but the goal was to set the GB at a certain specific level to be used in the largest range of dirt types which is logical if you are selling products nationally or world wide but as we know there is a whole lot of different kinds of difficult dirt out there.
A pre-set tool that might work perfectly fine and optimally in the great black dirt I used to hunt in when I lived near Kansas City could be, and is, totally overwhelmed in my current red clay, mineralized SE. devil dirt...no matter what coil I use it could be way off from "optimal" settings set by the factory.
What worked so well out west could be close to useless here, or to be precise they would still work but not close to as well as it would with ground balancing ability and options.
What to do?
Tesoro, and most other knowledgeable hunters, always suggested for rougher dirt buy a detector with a manual GB and that should take care of any issues in changing coils or optimum GB'ing even in the toughest dirt, or at least GB to the best level possible.
For owners of the Silver, Cibola and all the other detectors Tesoro made that were pre-set this wasn't possible unless you knew how to get into your unit and adjust the GB trimmer to your specific problem dirt...or add a GB knob.
Some attempted this and did it right, others tried it and totally messed up their units to the point they had to send them back in to Tesoro to get them to recalibrate and adjust them to work correctly again because this procedure can go sideways quick if you don't know what you are doing.
Some hunters can get totally obsessive about this stuff, not me of course but some, so when they picked a coil they were happy using they sent it in and their Tesoro pre-set detector PLUS a big bag of their local dirt and asked Rusty or whoever to GB to that specific dirt.
This they did happily and for free and this is where the idea for optimum ground balancing using a specific coil on a pre-set ground balanced unit became a thing.
It probably wouldn't have if only the lowest units lacked GB but Tesoro made several very popular detectors that weren't entry level from the Cibola on up that were not cheap and frustratingly could not could not manually GB so sending in dirt and the coil and detector became a thing...for those not brave or skilled enough to adjust it themselves or add adjustable GB ability.
The one problem I found is in my area of the country the dirt can very wildly by moving only a few feet.
On my F70 I have hunted in sites that GB'd in the 50's but move around just a little, rebalance, and that number can change and go up into the 60's, 70's and even the 80's if I get into heavy deposits of the red stuff.
If I wanted to adjust the GB or send in the detector and dirt to get it factory and optimally balanced which dirt should I pick to send in?
Again, manual GB units never needed it and hunters that spent time in better dirt usually didn't either, according to Tesoro.
For those of us that hunt in problem dirt were just left with a couple of options...
1) Try to optimally adjust the GB ourselves or mod it and add in a GB pot
2) Send it in with some dirt and ask them to adjust it for you
3) Deal with it as it is and hunt all the while knowing you are not hunting as deep or optimally as possible
4) Buy a detector with auto, or better yet, manual GB abilities.
Sometimes this stuff can make a difference, my manual GB detectors work much better here than my pre-set Compadre ever did...as much as I love that little thing.
Where I live GB can possibly get me a little deeper with better ID's and around here even as little as an extra inch or two can make a big difference in the quality and quantity of what I can find.
So the opinion is, my opinion, anyway, is if you hunt in decent dirt you should be fine switching coils on pre-set units...you won't ever be perfectly optimal but you will be close enough for government work and shouldn't worry about it.
For those of us blessed with problematic soil and conditions we need to deal with what the factory thinks are optimal levels of GB or make a change because the "what if" feelings of hunting knowing you are not optimally ground balanced can weigh heavy on some...they just can't enjoy themselves knowing what they know.
Me, I considered sending in some dirt and my Compadre but instead I just opted for investing in detectors that have manual or auto balance options.
I still use the Compadre here and there, still fun but not deep, my Mojave is a different design and works better here than the Compade for some reason but when the going gets tough I am going with my F70 or the Nox...those more advanced detectors can deal with my dirt much better than any pre-set unit can and I can change in the fly if my conditions change.
Using my pre-set units I have found a bunch even in my bad dirt and I am still finding great things but those "what if" feelings might still show up from time to time.