dredre7
Greenie
- #1
Thread Owner
I bought the MPX in haste, before reading this forum, was scared, but thought I would give it shot anyways. The review from the shop I bought it from seemed outstanding so I tried to keep an open mind.
First impressions were not good, opened the battery door and it said "MADE IN CHINA", ouch, not a good sign. The same day I received this detector, I also received a used Fortune Hunter (FH), (I think it is a Bounty Hunter) for my son that I bought on Ebay for $44.
The appearance of the detector seemed cheap and the housing seemed very large and bulky. The MPX and FH both took two 9 volts, the connectors for the batteries varied greatly, the FH had high qaulity solid hard plastic, while the MPX connectors were cheap. Took it out to the backyard, and it performed fine, didn't dig up too much trash except for an some bottle caps, aluminum cans, and a saw blade. I discovered it didn't have "notch" discrimination, was kinda upset. Again, I bought this in haste. I noticed the pinpointing was diffulcult to use as it would it either show depth on the bar scale without sound or sound without showing the bar, seemed like the pinpointing needed motion to work.
Tried air testing both machines, the FH had a better depth reading and also has notch discrimination that worked well, I Thought with the larger search coil on the MPX it should've performed better on the air test. The FH would not detect new pennies in notch mode however, there was a discrimination knob. I don't have an instruction manual so it might be something that simple. Anyways, the MPX had no problem with any pennies.
A couple of days later me and my son hit a schoolyard near me just stuck with the sand and didn't want to dig any holes, probably not a fair test for the MPX. Found some dimes and quarters, surprisingly no pennies and I decided to lower the disc to pull tabs just to see if I could find nickels, well I did, while only finding one pull tab that was cut in half. The pinpointing still was shaky, was easier not to use it. I just didn't feel good about the machine and sent it back before it was too late. By the way, I had a hassle-free return process on this machine.
Getting my Ace 250 in the mail soon, I should be happier.
First impressions were not good, opened the battery door and it said "MADE IN CHINA", ouch, not a good sign. The same day I received this detector, I also received a used Fortune Hunter (FH), (I think it is a Bounty Hunter) for my son that I bought on Ebay for $44.
The appearance of the detector seemed cheap and the housing seemed very large and bulky. The MPX and FH both took two 9 volts, the connectors for the batteries varied greatly, the FH had high qaulity solid hard plastic, while the MPX connectors were cheap. Took it out to the backyard, and it performed fine, didn't dig up too much trash except for an some bottle caps, aluminum cans, and a saw blade. I discovered it didn't have "notch" discrimination, was kinda upset. Again, I bought this in haste. I noticed the pinpointing was diffulcult to use as it would it either show depth on the bar scale without sound or sound without showing the bar, seemed like the pinpointing needed motion to work.
Tried air testing both machines, the FH had a better depth reading and also has notch discrimination that worked well, I Thought with the larger search coil on the MPX it should've performed better on the air test. The FH would not detect new pennies in notch mode however, there was a discrimination knob. I don't have an instruction manual so it might be something that simple. Anyways, the MPX had no problem with any pennies.
A couple of days later me and my son hit a schoolyard near me just stuck with the sand and didn't want to dig any holes, probably not a fair test for the MPX. Found some dimes and quarters, surprisingly no pennies and I decided to lower the disc to pull tabs just to see if I could find nickels, well I did, while only finding one pull tab that was cut in half. The pinpointing still was shaky, was easier not to use it. I just didn't feel good about the machine and sent it back before it was too late. By the way, I had a hassle-free return process on this machine.
Getting my Ace 250 in the mail soon, I should be happier.