Stringtyer
Sr. Member
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2017
- Messages
- 361
- Reaction score
- 894
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- The Old North State
- Detector(s) used
- Equinox 600
Tesoro Cutlass
Bounty Hunter Tracker II
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
My wife and I went to the beach this weekend with some friends just to get out of town and relax. Since I don't sit around very well, I took my EQ-600 and hit the beach. I worked the sand for about an hour before the wind and chilly temperatures got the best of me. The beach was the cleanest place I've ever detected with not so much as a pull tab or bottle cap.
Since I am still learning how to use my EQ, I dig anything that beeps. My three clear targets were zinc pennies. One was about 1/4 of the penny (the rest had corroded away) and it was buried 11 inches in the sand. I had a good time being on the beach and digging the beeps.
Now, my rant ... Who in their right mind came up with the genius idea of making coins from a bimetallic group that forms a natural battery when exposed to an electrolyte? A zinc penny in a salt water environment is simply a science experiment for 5th graders in how electricity is made. Arrrgggghhhh!
So ends my rant.
Since I am still learning how to use my EQ, I dig anything that beeps. My three clear targets were zinc pennies. One was about 1/4 of the penny (the rest had corroded away) and it was buried 11 inches in the sand. I had a good time being on the beach and digging the beeps.
Now, my rant ... Who in their right mind came up with the genius idea of making coins from a bimetallic group that forms a natural battery when exposed to an electrolyte? A zinc penny in a salt water environment is simply a science experiment for 5th graders in how electricity is made. Arrrgggghhhh!
So ends my rant.
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