MikeOregon
Sr. Member
- #1
Thread Owner
Hi,
Try as I will, I'm just not getting signals deeper than 6 inches with my XLT. Since much of the silver around here seems to be at 7 or more, I'm asking for ideas as to how to start getting deeper signals. I have tried turning up the pre-amp gain, but the ground here is often mineralized to the point that you can't push it up very much...maybe from 2 to 3 or, on a good day, 4. More experienced detectorists than I am are finding silver, though, so it's probably just a matter of experience (I've had the XLT less than 10 months).
I spent 7 hours last Sunday hunting a 100 year old farm (old by Oregon standards) and found one pocket spill of clad, a few Memorial cents, and a bunch of junk. The deepest signal I got was 5.5 inches. I know that place has not been hunted in at least 10 years, which is as long as the current owners have had it. There's GOT to be some older stuff there, but deep. If you're getting deeper than 5.5 inches and finding silver with your XLT, I'll appreciate any advice.
Thanks,
Mike
Try as I will, I'm just not getting signals deeper than 6 inches with my XLT. Since much of the silver around here seems to be at 7 or more, I'm asking for ideas as to how to start getting deeper signals. I have tried turning up the pre-amp gain, but the ground here is often mineralized to the point that you can't push it up very much...maybe from 2 to 3 or, on a good day, 4. More experienced detectorists than I am are finding silver, though, so it's probably just a matter of experience (I've had the XLT less than 10 months).
I spent 7 hours last Sunday hunting a 100 year old farm (old by Oregon standards) and found one pocket spill of clad, a few Memorial cents, and a bunch of junk. The deepest signal I got was 5.5 inches. I know that place has not been hunted in at least 10 years, which is as long as the current owners have had it. There's GOT to be some older stuff there, but deep. If you're getting deeper than 5.5 inches and finding silver with your XLT, I'll appreciate any advice.
Thanks,
Mike