Safari coil question

Bama Billy

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Location
Central Alabama
Detector(s) used
Minelab Safari
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Hi all, I’m a total newbie but have had some great luck so far. I constantly hear that you have to “learn the sounds” of the safari so I spend as much time with my machine that I can. Here in Alabama I seem to dig a LOT of trash, which I guess isn’t exclusive to Alabama. Anyway, I’ve been reading up on coils and see a lot of folks using the 8x6 butterfly coil and it helps to seperate trash. Should I just stick with the stock coil or would the 8x6 be a good modification for my safari?
 

If you only have one main machine and like to hunt in different areas, some trashier than others, then I suggest you have multiple coils. Large coils are great for target sparse areas whereas smaller coils give better separation and are a must for target rich or trashy sites.
 

If you only have one main machine and like to hunt in different areas, some trashier than others, then I suggest you have multiple coils. Large coils are great for target sparse areas whereas smaller coils give better separation and are a must for target rich or trashy sites.

Thanks for the reply. The safari is my only machine currently and I’ve only been swinging it for 4 months or so. Almost all the areas I search have lots of trash. I’m surrounded by creeks and rivers that overflow so pull tabs and cans are everywhere.
 

I actually have 4 coils for my main machine, the trashier the site, the smaller the coil I use. My coils vary from 12" x 15" butterfly coil down to my 5" DD.
 

I have 5 for my MXT and 5 for my Minelabs. It's worth the investment imho. 😁
 

I too learned on a safari. I think everyone digs a lot of trash when they are new no matter what machine or what coil you have. A smaller coil can help to seperate targets in trashy areas, but you will still dig trash. Remember to swing low and slow, the safari is slower than other machines.
Multiple coils for a machine are great but there is no magic bullet, you are going to dig trash especially when your new. I'd focus on getting a lot of hours in and really focusing on the tones and VDI #s. There are some good youtube tutorial videos too.
Just my 2 cents
 

I too learned on a safari. I think everyone digs a lot of trash when they are new no matter what machine or what coil you have. A smaller coil can help to seperate targets in trashy areas, but you will still dig trash. Remember to swing low and slow, the safari is slower than other machines.
Multiple coils for a machine are great but there is no magic bullet, you are going to dig trash especially when your new. I'd focus on getting a lot of hours in and really focusing on the tones and VDI #s. There are some good youtube tutorial videos too.
Just my 2 cents

Agree with all of the above. I do have the 8x6 SEF butterfly coil, it's pretty much all I use, when wanting to change coils, I did buy an extra lower shaft that the stock coil is mounted on, changing coils that way is soooo quick and easy. As sheep dog mentioned, the Safari IS a slower machine, the VDI numbers are very slow in catching up to the tones, the recovery speed is rather slow between targets, in a trashy park, you really do need the smaller coil. The tones are the key, takes some getting use to, but like I have found for example, hunting in "Relic" mode, of which I always use, the #14 in a "High" pitch is 99% of the time bottle caps, whereas #14 in a more "Mid" tone is worth your closer attention, (pull tabs, nickels, lead, some gold rings) Good machine, not nearly as fast as others, but solid. Yep, get the smaller coil if you can.
 

Trash I get is usually low tones, Anything lower than 19 I have found is junk in my area. Even 39 turned out to be a wine bottle cap, down 3 inches. keep a small book and write down all junk numbers after awhile you will know which it is by the number you wrote down, did work for me when I started.
 

Sheepdog and Sparilroad, get advice and I can you both had one. I’m slowly learning that the number displays can be very misleading and I’m focusing on my tones. I learned the other day that a pull tab and a nickel both read 15, so I layed them down and tried to hear the difference. I’ve dug a ton of trash but at least I won’t have to dig it twice right? I’ve got the 8x6 on the way!
 

Using an Minelab Explorer (II and SE) series detector in trashy areas, I use the following [will fit the Safari]:

Little trash: Stock SE coil
Medium trash: Sun Ray X-8 coil
Heavy trash: Sun Ray X-5 coil

I periodically use a large Coiltek for some "clean" farm field areas, but these are few and far between.
 

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