childoftechnology
Jr. Member
In the past several years I've had a habit of buying a detector in the spring, and then reselling it in the fall to pay some bills, and repeating this every year. In the past 4 years I've had four different detectors - a Garrett GTA 350, Whites XLT Spectrum, Minelab Musketeer, and Fisher 1232-X. The only one that performed well for me was the Minelab, as it was able to compensate for my highly-mineralized soil and still give good depth. Unfortunately, the Minelab had some annoying drawbacks - shoddy craftsmanship (the main unit falling off the shaft, for example), lack of a volume control, and the awkward design that required flipping two switches to go into pinpoint mode. I might have kept the Minelab if not for those flaws.
I'm now considering buying one of two Tesoro machines this time - either a Cibola or Vacquera. The Vacquera is preferable because it has a ground balance adjustment, but whether this helps or not I don't know - and that's why I'm asking you guys. Do you think it would perform as well in mineralized soil?
Just to give you an idea of how bad my soil is.... any copper coins over 100 years old are always very green and corroded, and anything over 150 years old is almost unrecognizable. My Dad found an 1812 Nova Scotia penny and only an area about 1/4" square was still visible - everything else was completely eaten away.
Thanks for any advice.
I'm now considering buying one of two Tesoro machines this time - either a Cibola or Vacquera. The Vacquera is preferable because it has a ground balance adjustment, but whether this helps or not I don't know - and that's why I'm asking you guys. Do you think it would perform as well in mineralized soil?
Just to give you an idea of how bad my soil is.... any copper coins over 100 years old are always very green and corroded, and anything over 150 years old is almost unrecognizable. My Dad found an 1812 Nova Scotia penny and only an area about 1/4" square was still visible - everything else was completely eaten away.
Thanks for any advice.
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