The Metal Detecting Bible: Helpful Tips, Expert Tricks and Insider Secrets for Finding Hidden Treasures
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About this ebook
Nothing is as thrilling as finding cool (and often valuable) stuff right under your feet. So grab this guide and get ready to dig up more and more finds. Packed with helpful information on making your search successful and exciting, The Metal Detecting Bible serves up step-by-step instructions, illustrations, and useful photos that can turn you into a professional treasure hunter.
From quick-start tips for novices to insider secrets for the most experienced hobbyists, this hands-on guide is the ultimate resource on all aspects of metal detecting.
• Choose the best metal detector
• Learn where to search and why
• Practice appropriate swing techniques
• Integrate advanced GPS technology
• Scout out beaches, parks and historic sites
• Gain permission to hunt on private property
• Identify antique coins, relics and jewelry
• Use handy target recovery tools
• Clean and safely preserve your finds
• Sell your finds for a profit
Brandon Neice
Brandon Neice was raised in the historically rich, gold-bearing area of California’s Placer County. At a young age, he became interested in gold prospecting and treasure hunting. Brandon’s father, an experienced recreational prospector and avid outdoorsman, facilitated his interest by taking him on outdoor adventures throughout the northwestern US. Later in life, Brandon moved to Idaho, where he met a friend who was using metal detectors to find gold nuggets. Brandon purchased his first metal detector in 2003 and began searching for treasures near and far. Since then, he has traveled the world, unearthing rare and valuable metals of all sorts—from coins and relics dating to 50 BC to gold nuggets and meteorites from space. He’s gained millions of views on his YouTube channel, DrTones24K, that follows him and a team of detecting experts on their treasure-hunting adventures. Brandon has also assisted archaeologists in locating items of interest on historic properties, such as James Madison’s Montpelier estate. Some of his most accomplished finds include a 1901 S Barber Quarter (considered to be one of the rarest US silver coins produced in the twentieth century), a 50 BC Celtic gold stater, and a rare Norman-era ceremonial mount with gold-laced surfaces and an enameled crucifix design.
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The Metal Detecting Bible - Brandon Neice
INTRODUCTION
My name is Brandon Neice. Others might know me as Dr. Tones
from my YouTube series Dirt Fishin America, a compilation of videos that chronicle my metal detecting adventures with Eric Magnuson (Dirt Digler), T. J. Lawrence (Pickhead), Bill Hines (Billium), and Ryan Jamison (Badger), to name a few.
I was born and raised in Placer County, California, which was the center of attention during the California Gold Rush of 1849. In the third grade, my class went on a field trip to Sutter’s Mill, the site where James Marshall first discovered gold in California. I remember going home to my father and telling him all about the gold that was literally in our backyard!
Needless to say, I caught the fever that day, little knowing that my father and his two brothers had grown up prospecting and dredging the American River with my grandfather. That weekend, my father purchased my first gold pan and took me to a creek that ran through my great-grandfather’s property in the gold-bearing hills of Grass Valley. I watched in wonderment as my father began scouring the creek drainage that snaked its way down the hill to the valley floor. Occasionally I would catch him glancing up at the hills. It seemed as if he were listening to the hills tell the story of how they came to be. He knelt down by the stream and moved a few shovels of earth until he was satisfied with his results. He filled the pan with small amounts of soil from deep within crevices in the bedrock. Once the pan was full he showed me how to separate the gold from the earth by agitating the material with water from the creek. In the bottom of the pan—gold!
I remember thinking to myself, It’s out there! For real!
My father was an avid outdoorsman and each weekend was an adventure in the jeep or on horseback into the Sierra Nevada. Everywhere we went, the gold pan came along. Years later, my father moved to Idaho to start an outfitting business. I soon followed. Idaho had an extensive gold rush of its own and I remained an avid prospector.
One day, a friend of mine showed me pictures of some very impressive gold nuggets. I reacted by asking the classic rhetorical question, Where did those come from?!
He told me that a friend of his found them using a metal detector. These gold nuggets were far larger than any I had ever seen. A metal detector?
I said. Like…the thing that the old guys at the beach use?
He laughed and said, Yup! He found more gold in one day than he had in all his years of sluicing, panning, and dredging combined!
One week later, I had my very first metal detector. I had no clue what I was doing, where to look, or what to listen for. It took me almost a year to find my first gold nugget with a metal detector, but it was the biggest nugget I had ever found! I spent every waking moment thinking about getting back out to the gold fields and detecting. Unfortunately, the gold fields were now a little farther away and life managed to hinder my ability to get out. I began metal detecting around town for old coins and relics in hopes of satisfying my urges to get out to the gold fields. I studied old maps and numismatics, and researched locations to find old coins. I began to set goals.
Author holding his recently found...Author holding his recently found Celtic gold stater, circa 20 BC.
At first, they were modest: Find a silver coin, find a silver quarter, reach the 1800s, etc. My enthusiasm grew with each new benchmark, and I soon realized I was addicted. My passion had grown from gold to nearly everything. I wanted to find it all! Gold, coins, jewelry, relics, meteorites, sunken treasure—everything.
Since then, I have managed to find almost all of the above. It never ceases to amaze me. There’s so much treasure out there just waiting. This past year, I recovered what many consider the rarest US silver coin minted in the twentieth century!
The author’s 1901...The author’s 1901 S Barber Quarter, said to be one of the rarest US silver coins minted in the twentieth century.
Over the years, I’ve traveled all over the world in search of precious metals, from the deserts of Nevada to the hillsides of England, searching for everything from ancient Roman and Celtic coins to gold nuggets and meteorites. The feeling of setting out to find something in particular and then actually finding it is unexplainable.
In this book, you’ll learn the secrets I’ve acquired over the years that have helped me discover some truly priceless treasures. Finding treasure isn’t easy. So I’ve set out to write the book that I wish I’d had when I started. If you have a passion for saving history, prospecting, or going on outdoor adventures, you might just have what it takes to become a metal detector–wielding, modern-day treasure hunter.
CHAPTER 1
BASIC PRINCIPLES
Over 4,000 years ago, some curious humans figured out that they could extract minerals from the earth and melt them down to fashion tools. In the centuries that followed, metal became a staple of everyday human life, found in tools, money, jewelry, structures, cars, aircraft, boats, computers, and even spacecraft. As a result, the earth has become peppered with the remnants of mankind’s precious historical and amazing metals.
In 1874 Parisian inventor Gustave Trouvé invented a device used primarily to locate bullets and other metal fragments in patients. The metal detector was later refined by Alexander Graham Bell in 1881 in an attempt to locate a bullet lodged within President James Garfield’s back. Unfortunately for President Garfield, the attempt at using the metal detector wasn’t successful. The springs in the mattress that the president was lying on interfered with detecting the bullet and President Garfield later succumbed to infection from his injury.
Once the importance of such a device was acknowledged, refinements continued to advance the technology. At first, metal detectors were used primarily to locate and remove WWI and WWII land mines. Then, in 1931, Gerhard Fischer sold the first portable metal detector to the public. The technology, cumbersome and antiquated by today’s standards, failed to catch on as a hobby until the 1950,s, when lighter, more powerful machines with longer battery life reached the market. The electronic treasure hunter was born!
Since the hobby of metal detection was created, untold billions of dollars’ worth of gold, silver, coins, jewelry, antiques, war relics, meteorites, and more have been found using metal detectors. Most importantly, we have rescued items that would have been lost to the sands of time. Some of the artifacts that have been recovered by hobbyist metal detectorists have literally written and rewritten history books while others now grace the shelves of the Louvre.
BASIC DESIGNS
To start off, I have to address some basic functions and principles. This chapter will get some technicalities out of the way so you can go metal detecting! I’ll try to make this as painless as possible. I’m not an engineer, so I’ll speak in terms we can all relate to.
Various types of metal...Various types of metal detectors used for different applications.
The basic design of a metal detector consists of a control box with a few buttons and/or knobs, a coil (the roundish thing that you place next to the ground), and a shaft that allows you to swing the detector in a fashion that is conducive to finding, well, metal. There are several different types of metal detectors. The most common by far is what we refer to as a VLF (very low frequency) machine. Metal detection machines also include pulse induction (PI), zero voltage transmission (ZVT), full band spectrum (FBS), and other types of multi-frequency machines. For the sake of moving forward, I won’t be discussing some of the older, more antiquated technologies.
VLF DETECTORS
VLF metal detector...VLF metal detector. Note the chord is securely wound around the shaft to avoid entanglement.
VLF detectors operate on a very primitive principle using magnetic fields. Here’s how:
The metal detector’s control box produces an electrical current that is transmitted via the transmit portion of the coil.
Once the current leaves the coil, it becomes a magnetic field. The size and shape of the detection field varies depending on the size and type of coil, the frequency, and environmental factors, such as ground conditions.
The magnetic field generated by the transmit portion of the coil oscillates at varied frequencies.
When a metal object is introduced into the detection field, electrical currents begin to flow through the metal object. These are called eddy currents. Eddy currents generate a magnetic field of their own.
The magnetic field created by the metal object is different in size and strength from that of the magnetic field produced by the transmit coil. Ultimately, it’s the altered and quickly decaying magnetic field of the eddy currents that is detected.
Coin responding to the...Coin responding to the coil’s magnetic field.
The metal detector’s transmit frequency plays a large role in how metal targets respond. As a rule of thumb, the lower the frequency, the farther and deeper the signal will travel. However, lower frequencies do not respond well on small targets and low conductors. On the opposite end of the spectrum, higher frequencies are more sensitive to small items and low conductors.
When referring to the conduction properties of a metallic object as it pertains to metal detecting, the term conduction
refers to how the metallic object facilitates eddy currents. There is a direct correlation between an object’s ability to conduct electricity and an object’s ability to facilitate eddy currents: The better the metallic object conducts electricity, the better the object will facilitate eddy currents. The better an object facilitates eddy currents, the more likely it is to be a high conductor,
such as silver or copper, thus generating a high tone.
The opposite can be said of low conductors,
such as iron and lead.
INDUCTANCE
Although gold in its purest form (24k) is an excellent conductor of electricity, jewelry is rarely 24k. The majority of gold jewelry is 18k or less. Because of this, gold jewelry is typically a very poor conductor and will more often than not generate a low or medium tone that falls into the range of foil, pull tabs, can slaw (this occurs when a lawnmower hits an aluminum can), and other bits of small, metallic garbage. So if it’s gold jewelry you’re after, YOU MUST DIG IT ALL!
A large, low-conducting target (like