Quote:
Originally Posted by the lord of the gold
I've done this repeatedly, but not succeeded, bearing in mind that these burials old more than 80 years, maybe ten years later has been extracted.So I want to make sure of burials still exists.
I need help which device that can help me.
regards
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Hi the lord of the gold,
From what you say, you do not know the location of the treasure within a 3 meter diameter.
If this is the case, then maybe you can tell us what is the limit of the search area?
Is it 30 meters
Or is it 300 meters?
Or it 3 km?
Or is it 30 km?
One thing I see on your photo is there are some steel bands nailed to the wood box.
These bands take the shape of a conductive ring.
If you take a 2-box locator to search, then you should stop every time you find some detection.
Take the 2-box to search from all different directions over the target.
If you find a box like in your photo, then you will see strong ferrous detection in only one direction, and weak in the direction turned 90 degrees.
You must walk in a straight line over the target to walk past where the target is to find the direction of strong ferrous detection. The strong detection will come when you are walking the direction along the long length of the buried box. The steel loops are expected to make a stronger ferrous signal when you walk in this direction with a 2-box.
I do not expect you will find this same phenomenon when you use a flat-coil metal detector.
When you find one of these boxes, you can expect to find a mixed signal with ferrous and non-ferrous together.
Best wishes,
J_P