One more thing to illustrate the sensitivity and ability of the Compadre.
In an area near a picnic pavilion, trashy as all get out and an area I have scoured many times in the past I came across this thing.
Nestled between two different pieces of trash it came in loud and clear at the 3:00 area on the disc knob just like a normal zincoln.
Any good target you can pull out of a trash heap is a great one even a zincoln so I bent over to dig it and got another jaw dropping surprise.
Not a zincoln but the smallest, thinnest, lightest precious metal ring I have ever found.
Even between the trash and despite its size it still hit hard like a shallow quarter.
A silver ring at .3 grams.
Not 3 grams...POINT 3 grams.
I have found more chains with my Compadre than any other tool because of this sensitivity, it hits on most links and definitely every clasp no matter how small I have ever run past the coil.
The other pic is the smallest and thinnest silver chain in my collection.
I hit the clasp, not the one with the ring the other end and luckily I usually hunt way down low into iron or all metal and thumb the disc knob up to figure out my targets or I would have missed it.
At the R in iron it hit big...at the O it was completely silent.
There is a reason many consider this one legendary...many, actually, and this hyper sensitivity is just one of them.
Even though I don't pull it out all the time when I do use it are usually special times for me.
I will never let mine go.