I'm usually at 3 bars. I hunt old mining towns, parks, back yards, anything with possibilities. The remote areas are the ones with 3 bars and my most common hunting area.
What state are you in???
Out west??
I'm usually at 3 bars. I hunt old mining towns, parks, back yards, anything with possibilities. The remote areas are the ones with 3 bars and my most common hunting area.
I cant hunt within 20' of my buddy...we both have AtPros set exactly the same...Another time, I was hunting with a guy and we both were swinging CZ20's...you couldnt get within 40' of each other...That coulda been what was going on with you guys...? Thats all I got to add...I cant find a penny right on the deck if I am close to another rig...
Mud
What state are you in???
Out west??
I cant hunt within 20' of my buddy...we both have AtPros set exactly the same...Another time, I was hunting with a guy and we both were swinging CZ20's...you couldnt get within 40' of each other...That coulda been what was going on with you guys...? Thats all I got to add...I cant find a penny right on the deck if I am close to another rig...
Mud
F75 works at 13Khz. MXS works at 13.9Khz. They should be far enough apart on the spectrum that they aren't causing proximity interference. However, Coils are nulled at a particular frequency. If you put the coils right next to one another or on top of one another, you should get interference since you will be changing the mutual inductance across the whole system (between the F75 transmit and receive coil, the MXS transmit and receive coils, and adding a new component of mutual inductance between the F75 transmit coil/MXS receive coil, and the MXS transmit coil/F75 receive coil).
So, that is one potential source of non-detection.
Another is ground balance.
If the detectors are ground balanced for well, ground (and if you can lock your ground balance), and you are air testing, you are going to have a difference of -90 to -95 in VDI which will wrap the dime into a region that is likely being discriminated out.