Nice work once again, the old patches still hold gold, it's hard to get it all, but that's ok, you can find it on the next trip. Filming takes up a lot of swing time, but that's a part of it, although we'd find more gold if we just stuck to swinging the coil. Cheers Pete
Thanks mate. I’ve barely investigated this area and it’s HUGE! So I’m hoping more to come. I agree mate. Filming does take a lot of effort and time. I like sharing my experience , as do you. . That’s Pete 💪💪
That bit you got that you thought was going to be bigger, that is always the way with the 6000, was a solid little bit though & down a bit too. Doing what the 6000 excels at. You should try the 11" coil. It will give you more depth than the 12x7 & isn't a shabby coil for sensitivity either. Best of luck out there. John from NZ :)
It's countryside we'd all like to be in, exposed grounds, eroded gullies, too enjoyable to be filming and talking while swinging the detector, though you never know if there may be a big lucky strike signal close to the surface while the camera is rolling, the ultimate hope, all in the one take! Mixing it up fine, into the sun it's sunburst patterning, away from the direction of the sun it's harder for you to see your screen for you, if it's recording in focus or finger in the way, but clearer to for the viewer to see the terrain and nature. Seems there the trees are small, little topsoil, little build-up of vegetation.. the music could do with gentler build-up.. do you detect swinging quickly from gold found point to a picked zone further up in sight, similar to the found gold, or track in certain directions the gold in the area is known to extend or thought to lie, like N/S reef lines, E/W leads? Onya, happy fossicking!
Thank you. I generally swing very slow. What you see on video are usually not my real swings. I like to hit gully’s and edge of workings moving “ down hill” if I can. The reefs here are very easy to spot. Thanks for watching 💪