Fisher M-SCOPE CZ-3D User Manual

Page 23

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TARGET IDENTIFICATION

7. Set your discrimination at an appropriate level. If

there’s very little trash in the area, set it low, say at

iron discrimination and dig every good signal. If there

is a lot of trash present and you’re mainly interested

in coins, set the discrimination level high—you may

even want to sacrifice nickels and zinc pennies in

extremely trashy areas. If you’re looking for gold

rings, relics, artifacts, or small ancient coins, you’ll

have to set your discrimination level low. The best

way to find out how low is to bury some sample

targets or just dig everything for awhile until you get

a feel for which target classifications will be the most

productive.

8. Look for repeatable signals and don’t waste time

on disappearing or one-way signals. If you hear a

good beep but can’t repeat it when you go back

over the target area, or if it beeps in only one sweep

direction, it’s probably a piece of trash—something

below your discrimination setting.

9. If you’re in a relatively non-trashy area, try searching

in the Autotune mode and then identify your targets

by switching to DISC = 0. You’ll find more and deeper

targets this way.

10. If you’re having any difficulty pinpointing or identifying

a target in the ID mode, don’t waste any more time.

Push the pinpoint button for quick pinpointing then

release it for accurate ID.

11. If your target disappears when you go into the Pinpoint

mode, you’ve probably tuned it out by pressing the

button too close to the target or over another piece

of metal. Try again, this time pushing the PINPOINT

button over another piece of ground.

12. Don’t waste a lot of time digging holes for targets

you can’t find if your hole keeps getting deeper and

wider, cover it up and go on. You may be over a

buried pipe or some other large deep target.

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