Wow, great, thanks a lot. I think I will make a nice coil first and then make the circuit mods. I was thinking about changing the round coil into an eliptic shape - as pinpointing is quite difficult with a large round coil.
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PI from Poland ???
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I've been studying the circuit for a couple of hours today, because my unit was unstable with larger coil for unknown reason.
After a session with scope, I added two 1µF tantalum capacitors between ground and +5/-5V, very close to US2 (I even thought about soldering them directly to the US2, but it's easy to damage IC that way).
Then I found out that the GND carries spikes (couple of mV's) caused by the coil current. I desoldered the coil ground connection from the point marked on PCB (take look at the ground path, IMO it's a design flaw) and soldered it directly to the C12, it reduced the noise by a lot and the detector runs stable
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I have not opened the detector since my last post, I still need to get all the parts. I have tried some new coils, but I need to get a proper cable and get rid of the cinch. Some cheap connectors kept my coils beeping all the time. I was even thinking of using a pigtail and some sort of "WAGO" terminals instead of a connector.
I also bought some PVC pipe to play with - how do you put the parts together? I could not put a knee or a T on the pipe without cutting down the edge or heating up by a flame. Is there an easier way?
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For my second coil I used 2x2.5mm^2 flat cable bought in audio store, it's the cable used to connect speakers to amplifier. It is relatively cheap (I bought 3 meters at about 12PLN here [about $4]) elastic and strong (the insulation is thick), also it's resistance is low and that's important.
The chinch is totally unreliable, I still had it last time I went out with the detector and it already caused minor problems (false signals) even though it's almost unused. For now I soldered the coil to the PCB, however I'll probably go to junkyard to search for industrial connectors, there are always plenty of old machines to search in. Last time I found these heavy-duty BNC-like sockets [18mm diameter], unfortunately I didn't find plugs

The pipes I used just fit inside the "knees" or "T" connectors without too much force. That's why I like them, the "T" with two short pipes makes a very nice variable angle coil mount
I cut my shaft into 3 pieces, drilled holes through all pipe-to-pipe connections and put there M5x60 screws (the one near the coil is M6x60 nylon) to hold everything in one piece.
http://img534.imageshack.us/img534/1189/schl.png
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The plugs and sockets you are looking for are probably German UHF plugs of the 2nd World War, often used on CB antennas nowadays.
Check thse links out:-
http://www.produktinfo.conrad.com/da...hse_UG_266.pdf
http://www.conrad.de/ce/de/product/7...266U/?ref=reco
http://www.conrad.de/ce/de/product/7...-259/?ref=reco
http://www.produktinfo.conrad.com/da...KER_PL_259.pdf
These are quite big, but VERY stable connectors for coax cables.
I hope this helps (better late than never!)
Andy
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The connectors look like German DIN plugs, called HF here and still used on citizens band radio aerials.....big and high quality.Originally posted by Pepe LeMiau View PostFor my second coil I used 2x2.5mm^2 flat cable bought in audio store, it's the cable used to connect speakers to amplifier. It is relatively cheap (I bought 3 meters at about 12PLN here [about $4]) elastic and strong (the insulation is thick), also it's resistance is low and that's important.
The chinch is totally unreliable, I still had it last time I went out with the detector and it already caused minor problems (false signals) even though it's almost unused. For now I soldered the coil to the PCB, however I'll probably go to junkyard to search for industrial connectors, there are always plenty of old machines to search in. Last time I found these heavy-duty BNC-like sockets [18mm diameter], unfortunately I didn't find plugs

The pipes I used just fit inside the "knees" or "T" connectors without too much force. That's why I like them, the "T" with two short pipes makes a very nice variable angle coil mount
I cut my shaft into 3 pieces, drilled holes through all pipe-to-pipe connections and put there M5x60 screws (the one near the coil is M6x60 nylon) to hold everything in one piece.
http://img534.imageshack.us/img534/1189/schl.png
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Hello, do You can share the schematic ALl1, it's really interesting vlf!Originally posted by sonar View PostMany people in Poland buy this PI as kit. Jabel is known as 'nail master'. This simply md work realy good - but Jabel rain of nails is close here
I didnt bulit this one but i will try your 'ad-on'...
Im come from Poland - here the best dynamic metal detector is ALL-1...
Jabel kit cost here is about 45-50 dollars
ps. more about this PI... you can find here: http://www.exploracja.cyberdusk.pl/p...forum.php?f=43
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Hello, do you have A1?Originally posted by sonar View PostMany people in Poland buy this PI as kit. Jabel is known as 'nail master'. This simply md work realy good - but Jabel rain of nails is close here
I didnt bulit this one but i will try your 'ad-on'...
Im come from Poland - here the best dynamic metal detector is ALL-1...
Jabel kit cost here is about 45-50 dollars
ps. more about this PI... you can find here: http://www.exploracja.cyberdusk.pl/p...forum.php?f=43
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Here is the ATiny-4 schematic. This is the original circuit made by "Pulsi" from www.pulsdetektor.de Germany in 2003.
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