Nexus High & Low Conductors 'Micro Blog'

When I'm Hunting With Nexus Do I Think I'm Leaving Certain Targets In The Ground Based On Their Conductivity In Relation To The Frequency Coil I'm Using?

The simple answer to the question above is - NO. This horseshit debate was started off the back of the multi-frequency marketing hype. I keep things very simple in my mind, I use low frequency coils when I'm wanting to go deep and I use high frequency coils when I want both separation, unmasking and I'm looking to go for the really small stuff. Due to the way Nexus is designed and how the coils are wound the machines don't act like other single frequency analog metal detectors.

Do Certain Frequency Coils Hit On Certain Conductivities Better? I genuinely haven't noticed this when out hunting I see no difference whatsoever. The high frequency coils will hit furiously hard on tiny targets compared to the low frequency coils, but in regards to specific targets being missed due to their conductivity in relation to the frequency coil I'm using, that's just not the case. I've found both low and high conductors at really good depths, all with banging signals using both high and low frequency coils. 

So to conclude, your digital machines might hit better on certain high and low conductors depending on what frequency or mode you are running. But it just doesn't work that way with Nexus and if someone states that Nexus falls short hitting on either high or low conductors depending on what coil you're running. This proves once again that they don't know what they're talking about, you can't compare how other machines operate compared to Nexus and it appears however many times I say this the message doesn't seem to be sinking in. 

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