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 Pulsed induction metal detectors -2

There is excitation in the air associated with metal detectors with pulsed induction (PI). It is said that a revolutionary model will soon be released by several manufacturers. The main feature of PI detectors is their ability to simultaneously ignore both conductive and non-conductive mineralization in the environment, while maintaining high sensitivity to all metallic objects. Another positive feature is that their detection range does not depend on the medium between the coil and the target. Productivity is mostly not hampered by water, sand, silt, hard coral and, generally speaking, air. Some PIs that I used are not so deep as to find a target in the air, either for underwater or hidden targets.

I dug a 1957 Roosevelt coin for eighteen inches with my Fisher Pulse. It took more than forty minutes to get this coin in the water of the waterfall on Sunset Beach in Tarpon Springs, Florida, and this is the main reason I don’t use PI to shoot coins. Another reason is that extreme sensitivity to all metal objects will mean digging out about 30 pieces of garbage for every good purpose in most coin-shooting environments. You will literally plow the field before you finish covering the ground. After a comparative test last year, I dug up about 300 pieces of garbage and received only nine coins and three ornaments for memory. The third negative aspect of most PIs is the difficulty of pinpointing targets.

The exact definition using PI is a scientific art. Most conventional detectors either have a coil center, buttons, or a switch for accurate searching, making it easy to find items. One PI to which I belong is the center point of the target, located to the left of the center and very difficult for zero on small objects. My primary use for PI is gold prospecting, hunting for civil war relics and drilling wells. They go very deep! I dug my shotgun nearly two feet, my nails fifteen inches and, as mentioned above, a penny eighteen inches. Here is my positive idea for using PI for relic hunting. P in pulsed induction is worth "Power"! I feel confident when I hunt for fields and forests for relics, and a random coin is a great bonus. However, as a coin shooter, P in most of my surroundings is in favor of punishment. I cannot use it to hunt a burnt lot of property or on a sports bleaching zone or on a diamond ball, to name a few areas where an ordinary detector with a small coil of three to five inches will give much greater rewards rather than destroy the back or shoulders.

I have now listed some of the PIs, and they are worth the time to go online and compare their specifications and prices. Each serious treasure hunter must have one in his discovery arsenal. You may want to wait and see what is coming soon before you spend some serious money. I can not wait! Bring these new PIs.

C Scope 7 UMD (UK) - Underwater pulse detector

C Scope 4PI (UK) - Whole Purpose Detector

Minelab GPX - 4000 (Australia) - Gold Nugget / Search Detector

Minelab GP 3500 - (Australia) - Golden Detective / Search Detector

Minelab SD 2100 - (Australia) - Gold Nugget / Search Detector

Minelab SD 2200v2 (Australia) - Gold Nugget / Search Detector

Aurora Aqua Pulse (Canada) - Underwater outdoor detector

White & # 39; s Surfmaster PI Pro - Underwater / Surf / Beach Detector

Sandy shark Tesoro - Underwater detector

Garrett Infinium LS - Water / ground detector

Garrett Sea Hunter Mark II - Underwater detector

Fisher impulse - Land / sea detector

DetectorPro Headhunter Pulse - Underwater detector




 Pulsed induction metal detectors -2


 Pulsed induction metal detectors -2

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