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Post by Jeff Kinzli on Aug 17, 2004 23:33:42 GMT -5
You don't need it? That's one of my favorite coils! You'll be sorry at the first demo you hit without that coil I'm just playin' with ya, but seriously, that's a great coil (the Minelab one, that is).
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jim
GOAP (Grandmother of All Posters)
Posts: 1,975
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Post by jim on Aug 18, 2004 10:40:05 GMT -5
Joey, except for the beach & a few old park's that may be relatively clean, the 8 incher is the best coil you have. Much lighter too. HH..................j im
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Post by RICK (Madera) on Aug 18, 2004 15:12:43 GMT -5
HOW MUCH
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jim
GOAP (Grandmother of All Posters)
Posts: 1,975
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Post by jim on Aug 18, 2004 18:54:41 GMT -5
Probably about 8 oz. Rick. HH........ ;D.........................j im
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Post by mayumi1 on Aug 19, 2004 6:18:21 GMT -5
AgileMJOLNIR, Believe me, make life easier on yourself. If you are a new explorer user, take out the stock coil and learn on the 8 incher. Use it for a month. This will shorten your learning curve. By doing this, you will avoid having to dig empty holes for the first few outings, or weeks. You will spare yourself the frustration off having to learn the tones on a bigger coil. Work up to the bigger coils. If you are an old time explorer user, youll still want the coil but it is almost a necessity to a new comer. It helped me from selling my own machine from frustration. There is a steep learning curve to the explorer. That just my 2 centavos. btw, nothing helps as much as a coin garden. plant one too. make sure you put some 8 inch deep silver in there so you can hear what a deepie sounds like. keep tuning down sensitivity (to simulate even deeper targets) until you can barely hear it, "and that will be the tone you like best" . bing
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