Originally posted by Davor
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On the other hand, Disc. channel isn't. Let me explain.
A switching detector is in effect an analogue multiplier. It multiplies a square wave with an incoming signal. Such multiplication produces some high frequency components, but more importantly a DC signal that is related to the incoming signal level, and the phase. With only a slight approximation, we may say that the output of such multiplication after filtering is cosine related to the RMS value of the incoming signal. Cosine means full value for 0°, zero for 90° phase difference, and vanning values in between.
Let's assume for simplicity that we have a gold response at 80° from Disc sample phase. cos(80°)=0.174 and when converted to dB against the value in a GEB channel (0.985) it is -15dB. It means that you'll get a positive response on small gold only for 15dB++ in GEB channel.
Shortly, Disc. channel is in considerably more trouble than GEB.
My suggestion ... go for a dual discrimination just as IGSL does, and overlap the discrimination channels. You'll hit two flies with a single blow:
- you effectively get a very useful third "tone" indication for Al foil, modern nickel rich coins and small gold
- by overlapping, the disc. channel vector is skewed a bit further, so that 80° from the above example becomes 60-70°, and GEB to Disc. ratio becomes -4.7 to -8.7dB, hence your depth increases for at least 10%
I already overblown the gain in Disc. channels in my IGSL to compensate for the Disc. to GEB ratio, and as a consequence my IGSL is neither losing sensitivity at low levels, nor exact discrimination indication in full span from low to high levels in the overlapped region. I just love it.
- you effectively get a very useful third "tone" indication for Al foil, modern nickel rich coins and small gold
- by overlapping, the disc. channel vector is skewed a bit further, so that 80° from the above example becomes 60-70°, and GEB to Disc. ratio becomes -4.7 to -8.7dB, hence your depth increases for at least 10%
I already overblown the gain in Disc. channels in my IGSL to compensate for the Disc. to GEB ratio, and as a consequence my IGSL is neither losing sensitivity at low levels, nor exact discrimination indication in full span from low to high levels in the overlapped region. I just love it.
Since both DISC channels are not "optimal" for gold (only the GEB channel is optimal for gold by coincidence, as Davor also illustrated), you are not really as sensitive to gold as you could be if you set the IGSL as Davor indicated (overlapping on gold). Now Davor says he compensated by increasing the gain of his DISC channels. However, this also increases the noise, so he has not gained S/N in the DISC channels, only adjusted the threshold similar to the GEB channel.
The GEB channel should still have a superior S/N for gold, because the sync pulse is optimal. So a single GEB channel would be better for hunting gold in remote areas where there is no trash to worry about.
ALL METAL mode should be good also, but the IGSL may have the same triangular sync pulse as the TGSL for ALL METAL mode, I'm not sure. If not, then ALL METAL mode would make a good IGSL gold hunter (remote areas), assuming ALL METAL mode has the same sync pulse as the GEB (cancel ferrite).
This is the idea, although in practice the slight disadvantage of the DISC channel for gold may be hardly an issue; probably not.
One other thing puzzles me - my past observations noted that the DISC channel seemed to give a larger signal for most metals than the GEB channel. Although I don't have any gold handy, I believe I tested foil and observed the same thing. However, our discussion here suggests that the GEB channel should have a stronger signal to gold/foil. Maybe my observations were mistaken, I'll check again.
-SB
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