TheMini Hoard metal detector from Nokta Makro is the perfect detector to get your children out of the house and into metal detecting. The Mini Hoard is part of the world's first waterproof kids detector series. The Mini Hoard finds, discrimnates and pinpoints -- just like an adult's detector.
The Mini Hoard is full submersible up to 3 feet (1 meter) deep, meeting IP68 criteria. The detector features a retractable shaft, allowing you to set the length from 25 inches to 35 inches. And the detector is lightweight, weighing only 1.7 pounds.
Because MWF always seeks to develop and provide a distinctive and effective product and is concerned with the requirements of explorers and adventurers who love searching for treasures all over the world.
These detectors use bio-energy interaction, ionization technology, electromagnetic field detection, advanced microprocessor analysis, long-term soil disturbance detection, and sensor fusion. The longer the burial time, the easier it is to detect these metals due to more pronounced ion fields and electromagnetic signatures.
With your new detector, you will receive a Quick Start Guide, a valuable resource designed to guide you through the essential steps of operating your new device seamlessly. This user-friendly guide is tailored to ensure that even beginners can quickly grasp the fundamental functions and features.
For those seeking a more profound understanding, a comprehensive manual accompanies your purchase. This detailed manual delves into the intricacies of your detector, providing a wealth of information for users eager to explore advanced settings and capabilities.
However, the pinnacle of expertise in harnessing your detector's full potential lies in professional training. While guides and manuals offer a solid foundation, professional training takes your knowledge to the next level. Through hands-on instruction and insights from seasoned experts, you'll gain a deeper understanding of your detector's nuances and unlock its optimal performance.
In addition to a general introduction to the functionality and operating modes of your detector, the detector Expert explains how to use the detector efficiently in the field. In doing so, he can correct small errors during the measurement and advise you on special features of your search projects.
The Nokta Makro mini hoard is the worlds First waterproof metal detector for kids.The light-weight design and simple user interface makes it a great way to introduce youngsters to the hobby, getting them outdoors and uncovering history.
Ideal Age Operating Frequency Audio Tones Pinpoint Sensitivity Setting Discrimination LED Indicator Depth Indicator Battery Indicator Auto Shut-off & Alarm Volume Control Search Coil Display Weight Length Battery
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Welcome to Serious Metal Detecting! We specialize in providing top-of-the-line metal detector packages and accessories for prospecting gold and other valuable metals. Our online store offers a wide selection of metal detectors, videos, books, and DVDs to help you get the most out of your metal detecting hobby. We also offer free shipping for orders over $149.00 within the United States. Don't forget to check out our latest metal detector models from top manufacturers such as Garrett, Minelab, Nokta, XP and more. If you have any questions or need help finding the perfect equipment for your needs, please don't hesitate to contact us. Happy hunting!
The Vista Mini is a simple but powerful metal detector built to work very well in the field for the novice to the hobby, without the headaches of confounding settings that detectors can carry.
The Vista Mini is really the simplest detector in our range and on the world, and it also comes with preset discrimination and it is also very reliable because it runs a lower kHz than the Mini Max.
As you know I have been metal detecting for 30 years. I still consider myself a newbie. However, it is with the same old machine. Back when I purchased my machine we were told it will detect everything, it's a do all machine. I new of prospecting machines, but never knew the difference or seen the demand until I came to this forum. So if you have time, please answer these question. I am going to throw these out as I don't really know how to ask the correct question. What if the difference in a gold machine vs a regular machine? What makes them stand out? I know there is a frequency difference, but what make them stand on when looking for gold? Are they just not tuned for gold?
Metal detectors for prospecting originally were just coin detectors with a different label. My first metal detector in 1972 was a White's Coinmaster 4. My next was a "prospecting detector", the old White's blue box Goldmaster. Even then I was curious about what made them tick, and my first lesson in detector marketing was that the Goldmaster had the same circuit board in it as the Coinmaster! White's just put the same board in a larger box and called it by another name.
Those old machines were very poor since they could not ground balance, but even then prospectors found a large nugget now and then using them. It was not until around 1976 when White's unveiled ground balancing technology in the form of the White's Coinmaster V Supreme, probably the most significant breakthrough to affect detecting up to this day. The CM5 though was a very low frequency machine running at 1.8 kHz and not sensitive to small items. True story though is I owned one myself, and sold it to a prospector who promptly went out and found a nugget weighing several ounces with it.
It was Garrett who really launched the modern prospecting metal detector era around 1980 with the 15 kHz Garrett Groundhog. The 15 kHz frequency choice was far higher than the 3 - 8 kHz standard of the day. This enhanced the sensitivity of the machine to smaller targets and combined with the ground canceling capability the Groundhog series was one of the first detectors to stand out in the fledging electronic prospecting rush just underway in Australia. The skyrocketing price of gold fueled detector sales, and soon reports of massive gold nugget finds appeared. All of the sudden all the other manufacturers wanted in on this new business opportunity.
Photo - Garrett 15 kHz ADS Groundhog in 1980, later rebranded as the Garrett Gold Hunter (click for larger version). Garrett employed the same basic circuit in several models all the way up to and including the 15 kHz Garrett Gold Stinger, only retired a few years ago.
Still, many of the new machines of the day were just repackaged coin detectors. The next big advance was what in my opinion was one of the earliest prospecting detectors designed from the ground up for that purpose. It was even part of the marketing pitch "the metal detector engineered for one job". The 19 kHz Fisher Gold Bug introduced in the late 1980's timeframe. By 1990 Gold Bugs were everywhere, and the new lightweight design with compact removable control box mounted on an ergonomic (for the times) S rod was truly revolutionary. The dual stacked ground balance control and 19 kHz low gain design was excellent at ground handling and had good sensitivity to gold nuggets.
In highly variable ground the manual ground balance machines left something to be desired, and this was most apparent in the Australian goldfields. In 1987 an upstart company in Australia introduced automatic ground tracking in the form of the Minelab GT16000. This was a real aid for prospectors in extreme ground and helped propel Minelab into view as an option for U.S. prospectors.
For me personally in Alaska, with low mineral ground and small gold, the next big event was the introduction of the 50 kHz White's Goldmaster II in 1992. This large jump in frequency made the machine shine on small gold in low mineral ground, and it was the GM2 that really caused metal detecting for gold to take off in Alaska. I could not get them fast enough initially to meet the overwhelming demand, which I personally stoked locally with my own success in using the unit.
By 1995 Fisher returned fire with the 71 kHz Fisher Gold Bug 2, which represents a high water mark of sorts in single frequency nugget detector designs. Still in production to this day, it is the detector of choice for many prospectors who choose to use a single frequency detector.
However, increasing metal detector sensitivity to small gold by boosting frequency was not helping get large nuggets deeper in extremely mineralized ground. Engineer Bruce Candy shopped a pulse induction design around to a few manufacturers but U.S. companies were not impressed with its poor sensitivity to small gold and they thought nobody would pay the money required to purchase such a device. The Minelab SD2000 was introduced in 1995. I tried one on my ground in Alaska and could run circles around it with a Goldmaster 2 or Gold Bug 2. The SD2000 simply could not detector gold much smaller than a gram in size even if the nugget was touching the coil. I could not see why people would spend thousands of dollars for such a device.
The answer of course was Australia. Large nuggets buried deep in highly mineralized ground, out of reach of the induction balance detectors. Massive amounts of gold were found with the SD in Australia, and savvy operators in the western U.S. took note. Soon SD machines were also being used in the worst soils in the western U.S. and pulse induction technology proved itself with its amazing ground handling capability.
And the rest, as they say, is history. The big failing of the pulse induction machines initially was in small gold capability, but with each generation Minelab improved on this, to the point that now a Minelab SDC 2300 is very close to the best induction balance detectors for small gold sensitivity while having superior ground handling capability. Minelab developed such a large lead in pulse induction that nobody else was able to seriously challenge Minelab in this area. To this day they are the undisputed leader in gold prospecting detectors, this reputation built largely on the back of their pulse induction machines, culminating in the GPX 5000 and SDC 2300.
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