DaytonaRacer
Sr. Member
Last summer I joined an MD club and then helped them run their annual fall Open Hunt fundraiser (non-members pay to search a seeded beach area for coins and compete for prizes). I had never experienced an Open Hunt before so it was very interesting. Yesterday we had our annual members-only picnic & beach hunt. It was my first time "competing" in one of these so I was learning as I went as I didn't watch the non-members in the field last time.
Found some pretty need things - 1 oz. Copper round, .925 silver ring, 1960-D BU penny in cardboard holder, Buff nickels, 1880's dime, marked coins for raffles, etc. - and I won a 1 oz. Silver round in one of the raffles.
But one thing became an issue and I was wondering how others here have dealt with it...
I was using a Fisher F22 and there was another guy competing with a F44. If we were even remotely near each other (I'm talking 15-20 feet) my detector would start falsing and jumping all over the place. It was totally unusable. At first I thought it was my detector screwing up maybe because of the batteries so I lost valuable time during the hunt trying to fix my detector. It was only when he identified himself as having another Fisher and that they were interfering with each other that I stopped fussing with my machine and we moved apart.
My question to the group here... if any of you have had similar experiences with interference from others' same make or model machines, especially in a contained field, how do you deal with it? Does dropping the sensitivity do any good and still allow you to hit buried coins? Or do you just have to be aware of who has a similar machine and try to avoid them as best you can, knowing that you'll likely still be chasing a lot of false signals? (Okay, that's 3 questions)
Thanks.
Found some pretty need things - 1 oz. Copper round, .925 silver ring, 1960-D BU penny in cardboard holder, Buff nickels, 1880's dime, marked coins for raffles, etc. - and I won a 1 oz. Silver round in one of the raffles.
But one thing became an issue and I was wondering how others here have dealt with it...
I was using a Fisher F22 and there was another guy competing with a F44. If we were even remotely near each other (I'm talking 15-20 feet) my detector would start falsing and jumping all over the place. It was totally unusable. At first I thought it was my detector screwing up maybe because of the batteries so I lost valuable time during the hunt trying to fix my detector. It was only when he identified himself as having another Fisher and that they were interfering with each other that I stopped fussing with my machine and we moved apart.
My question to the group here... if any of you have had similar experiences with interference from others' same make or model machines, especially in a contained field, how do you deal with it? Does dropping the sensitivity do any good and still allow you to hit buried coins? Or do you just have to be aware of who has a similar machine and try to avoid them as best you can, knowing that you'll likely still be chasing a lot of false signals? (Okay, that's 3 questions)
Thanks.
Upvote
0