Mayo South Elgin
Sr. Member
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2007
- Messages
- 383
- Reaction score
- 1
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- South Elgin IL
- Detector(s) used
- MineLab
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
- #1
Thread Owner
Well the last time out, while Lowbatts was asleep against a tree and reminding me of similar sights I had seen in Lincoln Park in the late 60's minus the metal detector, I decided to try a different way of moving the coil over the ground. Since my arm was tired (shoulder injury) and I had already switched arms and *that* arm was starting to get tired too, I just started walking in a straight line with the coil in front of me.
Maybe that's something you have done before like on your way out of an area you've detected...and you're making a beeline straight to the car but you don't really want to stop detecting so you leave it on while you head to the car.
Anyways I thought it might be a more efficient use of my time and energy at that moment.
I'm thinking the original side to side movement metal detectorists typically make comes from minesweeping where you really don't want to advance forward before you're sure there's nothing in the ground in front of you - but is that the best movement to use when we're not concerned with mines?
So I get to the end of my imaginary 50 or 75 foot line, turn around, move the coil a little over and walk back again in a straight line, getting interrupted by various signals as I went along. Once I got a signal, I'd stop and do the usual sideways swingin of the coil in order to pinpoint.
Anyone else use this method regularly? If you try it out let me know how it goes. Might be a good way to cover a lot of ground until you start finding good stuff, then work the immediate area in the side to side fashion.
Maybe that's something you have done before like on your way out of an area you've detected...and you're making a beeline straight to the car but you don't really want to stop detecting so you leave it on while you head to the car.
Anyways I thought it might be a more efficient use of my time and energy at that moment.
I'm thinking the original side to side movement metal detectorists typically make comes from minesweeping where you really don't want to advance forward before you're sure there's nothing in the ground in front of you - but is that the best movement to use when we're not concerned with mines?
So I get to the end of my imaginary 50 or 75 foot line, turn around, move the coil a little over and walk back again in a straight line, getting interrupted by various signals as I went along. Once I got a signal, I'd stop and do the usual sideways swingin of the coil in order to pinpoint.
Anyone else use this method regularly? If you try it out let me know how it goes. Might be a good way to cover a lot of ground until you start finding good stuff, then work the immediate area in the side to side fashion.