{"id":1039,"date":"2017-10-03T14:00:08","date_gmt":"2017-10-03T14:00:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.clivesgoldpage.com\/?p=1039"},"modified":"2017-10-03T14:00:08","modified_gmt":"2017-10-03T14:00:08","slug":"identifying-bottle-caps-minelab-sovereign-excalibur","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.clivesgoldpage.com\/identifying-bottle-caps-minelab-sovereign-excalibur\/","title":{"rendered":"Identifying Bottle Caps with the Minelab Sovereign and Excalibur"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"Identifying Bottle Caps<\/strong><\/p>\n

I thought it would be a good idea to write a separate section on identifying the ever-present bottle cap.\u00a0 One reason is because firstly many caps have a nice spongy sound that can initially be mistaken for gold.\u00a0 Secondly, with its multiple frequencies, the Excalibur readily latches on to the varied metals that bottle caps contain.\u00a0 However, it is the way that the detector acquires and leaves the cap signal that makes them identifiable.\u00a0 The Excalibur gets its discriminate accuracy by grouping targets into the frequency ranges that they occupy.\u00a0 With a cap, these are many; meaning that the detector has to work hard to make these multiple classifications.\u00a0 This causes a difference in the signal tone.\u00a0 Caps come in one of two ways.\u00a0 Shallow ones sound abrupt, with multiple tones entering at once.\u00a0 The deeper, rusted ones are long, drawn out signal–usually more recognizable as something that is not completely non-ferrous.\u00a0 Both will have multiple \u201cnotes\u201d or pitches in the tone.\u00a0 As the detector tunes to the most central frequencies of the target the tone becomes smoother and even more likely to fool you, but in your initial passes where it is being compared to more of the surrounding ground, these multiple tones can be heard.\u00a0 This is the same \u201cdefining\u201d effect that makes a coin sound cleaner and higher as you \u201cwiggle\u201d the coil across it.<\/em><\/p>\n

Bottle caps can also be identified by how their varied composition causes them to enter the detection field.\u00a0 The detector must work hard to gather in a reading on all these metals and produce a tone response.\u00a0 This takes time and with practice it is possible to recognize the \u201clag\u201d in response time when the coil is swept over a cap. Coins, gold and other objects which are not such diverse alloys respond more quickly and cleanly.<\/p>\n

Another way to identify caps is that because they are composed of so many metals, the Excalibur does not always choose the same one to report. Changing your sweep speed and angle will often produce these different tones.<\/p>\n

Identifying caps by tone and signal characteristic is something that is definitely worth putting in some time at the bench to learn.\u00a0 Side-by-side tests over ground are a good idea too, because these are basically coil control methods.<\/p>\n

As well, the steel, tin and or rust in a cap are similar to the ground.\u00a0 This causes the signal to have a unique quality that results from the detector attempting to separate ground from target.\u00a0 The signal:<\/p>\n