Right!? Like dude planted shit over it.. let it grow and then came for it like its nothing. My goodness the lengths these mfers go to. Like ehh.. nothing abnormal here just some random ass patch right here plus the little seeds I dropped around said patch. Tfoh🤦♀️
Did some research, the company that made this camera was founded in 1946, a Japanese company born after the 2nd World War, the oldest this camera could be is 78 years old, great find
Wow, 100 years? Thats crazy because that looks like a man made beach, which means they pump sand up on it every 5-10 years. Crazy how its only a foot under ground. Super legit and real!
*Pulls a Prominar 6x20 B-34 Monocular from late 90s-early 2000s in near perfect condition buried in a foot of sand* "Its been waiting a hundred + years just for me"
@@user-hv5ly1vd4w what I'm a nerd bc I used image search on google 💀 shut up dweeb just because your mom didn't love you doesn't mean you can make it my problem clown 🤡
@@user-hv5ly1vd4woh your the kid who ended up with 12 kids, a dead end job and a girl who rides half the neighbourhood, shiit he lucked out compared to you.
@@michaeltenn983people just don't use their brain sometimes , I mean even if it was made in the 80's and someone looked after it and lost it and he finds it not long after then it still would be in a nice condition
Imagine, searching 100+ years for a device that was only produced less than 80 years ago, and finding it absolutely pristine under half a foot of caustic quartz sand.
@@utahgodinez6676, umm, no. They call that "sugaring" the dig site. You know to "sweeten" (improve the value) of the dig. A "sugar daddy" is a guy who "keeps a woman up" (provides for her financial and "other " "needs").
@@Hangman11 So, you telling me that you believe a 100 year old metallic object with no signs of degradation lying on the coast is more believable than him just digging up the area, burying the object, and covering it up again with sand and plants?
@@kaister901 no i think someone lost it recently, the plants grew over and hes hyping his found up with a clickbait headline. With limited information i would rather assume stupidness than malice. But who knows, maybe im just not jaded enough to believe someone would lie for this trivial amount of fame
@@Hangman11If you’ve seen this dudes shorts for a while, you know he 100% stages these finds, it’s really much more likely that he’s staging these than not
how lucky this man is, no scratches, clean as a whistle, working perfectly fine, and people not stealing his camera after he just buried it 21 minutes ago.
As a fellow metal detectorist, here are the reasons why this is fake: 1. notice how it was buried vertically. When you drop something on the sand, it lays horizontally, then slowly would get buried by sand. 2. If it spent any significant amount of time under wet sand/salt water it would be completely corroded, AND flooded. This is one clean optic! 3. This guy is an incredible actor. Notice how he detects a signal under the plants, but walks past it, to give the impression that it was a surprise. When you're detecting you don't go so fast that you fully step on the target. 4. Then he pulls out his phone to record. If he was recording from his head mounted cam, and his phone every single time he got a signal in the sand, he would have SO much footage of finding trash. This isn't proof, but given the other evidence it's obvious what he's doing. Please STOP with the fake vids, you're making the rest of us look bad
Not entirely sur eif its fake because of the plants but the plants do add a bit of suspicion. Like he didn't want to lose whatever he buried so he put a marker there.
Just happened to be walking with a camera one day, then unearth something next to new.....yeah we believe you bro....brilliant find on something you buried earlier, and marked with seaweed.
I found one of those a few weeks ago. The researcher at the museum tagged it as being close to 1100 years old. Also worth about $25,000 dollars. You and me be lucky bro.
Perfect condition, no water damage, no rust, even plastic?? Something that didn’t exist back then??? You got such a lucky find (at the store before you bought it)
@@user-bs6oh7uw8m what’s more realistic: finding an item in perfect condition despite the fact that it had been sitting under sand and water for so long that a flower bed appeared on top of it? Or maybe carefully placing some flowers over an item you bury? This guy obviously shows he’s willing to spend a shitload of time outdoors swinging a stick around, not hard to do a little gardening.
Сам закопал, сам нашёл 😂😂 Ибо опытные люди знают, то что под землей навсегла теряет свой качества вид, а на видео слишком всё целое, будто только из магазина.
@@Zeradiasyou an the originally commenter are both brain dead .. you can literally see him pulling out the roots how the hell would he of planted that there.. but I bet your smooth brain is gonna say he left it there for a couple months
They'd have to see him then plant the greenery with roots in the sand too. Y'all are so jaded you refuse to believe anything unique and interesting that happens to someone else is true. EDIT: I'm not defending it being 100 years old, I'm defending that he legitimately found it.
@@hopelesslydull7588my guy do you know how easily glass lenses get scratched up? Sand shifts a lot and there’s absolutely no way of avoiding major damage to that glass. There’s no way the lenses would be that clear even after just 10 years, never mind 100
@@camfranklin5036 Yeah, definitely not even 5 years. The title is clickbaited to hell, but explain to me how he'd bury that immediately beneath those plants with the roots pointed down without heavy gardening tools and at least a few hours.
As dig expert here is my professional review. Screws are nice and tight not too much rust Glass is not tinted or faint Color deterrent is non Yeah I'd say this piece is at least 10 minutes old and surprisingly in good condition Thank you for the 1k👏
The sand still comes off easily too so I'd say purposely buried..., the sand is also oddly dry one might say too dry for beach sand, so with this I must come to the conclusion that this videotelephony that we are witnessing as of this moment in time is fake and this man tried to make tomfoolery out of us, and might I add bro is capping for real.
Investigué un poco, la empresa que fabricó esta cámara se fundó en 1946, una empresa japonesa nacida después de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, la cámara más antigua que podría tener tiene 78 años, gran hallazgo.
The equipment is old, but not many new of it. There an image of the product purchase from the 1950's, so its kinda hard to find one that's new model since i can't find Its called: prominna 6x20 monocular To be there in a good condition plus the water didn't corrode from the metalic and plastic, yea it's mostly fake since the conditions is still good after 70 estimated years
Who’s to say it’s fake, grass was growing over it plus you can’t assume that thing has been there since the date it was made probly been sitting there for less then a year who’s to say.
Dang that is the most magnetic, cleanest, 100 year old plastic I've seen. You'd swear its shallow burial happen 10 minutes ago. The thing didn't get washed off 5 inches in the ground near the beach even. They don't make them like they used too.
for something over 100 years old it can't possibly be buried that far underground because it is not deep enough to be buried under 100 years of layers of sand.
@@yeetusdeletus8565 they look very real, its possible he put it there and came back for it after a week and planting some quick growing plants to make it more realistic, but the camera definitely wasn’t there for any extended period of time
If you want to watch proper metal detecting videos, if anyone's interested, try the Scottish Detectorist or the Dukes of Derbyshire. They don't fake thier videos and actually dig on fields instead of crappy beaches.
The quality of the materials and workmanship was really impressive 100 years ago, you don't understand how the things can be preserved in sand in a beach, those are the perfect conditions of humidity and salt content...😂😂😂😂😂😂
the plants are used as a marker, he probably burried it under there a few days ago to let the sand settle and look natural again but the plants made a perfect "X marks the spot"