John-Edmonton
Silver Member
- #1
Thread Owner

The season should be wrapping up soon. I sorted out most of my jewelery, and used the Scorpion for most of my land hunts. Shown are 6 x gold rings + 1 gold bracelet, along with mostly silver, stainless steel and cheaper costume jewelery.

Here is some miscellaneous jewelery, also found with the Scorpion this year. Most of the chains are silver, but there are also some metal ones too. The Scorpion Bangs hard on all of these.
I run my Scorpion a little different then some of my other detectors. When I go to a site, I crank the audio up to the point where it becomes unstable, then back off one complete turn. I use the auto mode. This seems to give me my best setting for sensitivity and discrimination. I set my discrimination at the default position, about 6 1/2, sometimes near but not at 7, depending on how many pull tabs are at the site. When I get a good signal, I center the coil over the target, then set it flat on the ground and switch to all metal mode. I drag the coil towards me, and the point at which I lose the signal, is where the target is below the forward foot of the coil. Now, depending on how quick the target audio cuts off, gives me a hint whether it is a coin or canslaw. You have to wear headphones to understand this sound. I try to hunt in all metal mode, unless there is just too much junk. Then I switch over too discriminate mode, set at the previously mentioned settings. Once the Scorpion is set up properly, it is a killer on rings, both gold and silver. You get a nice audio burst on such targets. But, as with all machines, you must learn these things. The things I have mentioned, are not in the manual, but have learned through trial & error plus digging up thousands of targets, both good and bad. If you are considering getting another machine, don't overlook the Scorpion Stinger. It's not a depth killer, and easily uses good quality 9 volt batteries. But in the top 3-4 inches, it's a killer with coins and jewelery. To go deeper. I pinpoint off the center of the coil, and can easily get a signals for coins at 8 inches.