Field Test Minelab Equinox 800
Treasure Hunting magazine|July 2018

For many months, the detecting scene has been buzzing about the arrival of an innovative new machine that promised to challenge most of the high-end detectors that currently dominate the scene. It seemed everyone was eager to hear more about the Minelab Equinox detectors, including myself.

David Stuckey
Field Test Minelab Equinox 800

My colleague, Julian Evan-Hart, suggested some time ago that one of these machines might become available for me to field test for Treasure Hunting magazine – I was filled with trepidation. As I’m getting on in age, I often wonder if I can embrace such rapidly evolving technology. After all, I still use a tiny pay-as-you-go flip-phone!

Then suddenly, a couple of weeks ago, Julian informed me that an Equinox 800 was coming my way for a field test – and that it was due to arrive the following day! It came as no surprise to me that I should get a text from my wife, whilst I was at work, informing me that a ‘massive’ package had arrived in the post. When I got home, I eagerly unpacked the machine to see what the new Equinox looked like. Looking at it in its box I was suitably impressed by the compactness of it all (Fig.1). In no time I had it unpacked and had managed to put it together, without even having to consult the manual – it was that straightforward.

The first thing I noticed was the incredible lightness of the machine compared to my own one. The Equinox weighs in at just 1.34kgs (2.96lbs). As I unpacked the rest of the box, I looked for the instruction manual. There wasn’t one. Instead there was an A4 folded sheet which gave basic instructions on what-was-what on the control panel. Instructions, it turned out, have to be downloaded from the Minelab website. This was perhaps my first frustration; it’s a necessity to have an instruction manual with you when you take a machine out for testing for the first few times, and I was due to take it out the following day! It wasn’t practical for me to download the instructions and print off reams of pages to take with me. I had little option but to take the folded sheet and try to work out the basics for myself.

This story is from the July 2018 edition of Treasure Hunting magazine.

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This story is from the July 2018 edition of Treasure Hunting magazine.

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