Originally posted by Qiaozhi
View Post
I've made a little mod to diagram... and this is what I think could be related to a real situation following your last posts.
Please let me know what do you think about, if is correct or not.
The sample for geb is where RX goes from negative to positive: since ground itself doesn't give phase shift (or that cause one rotate knob to compensate phase related to minerals in soil in mineralized ground) we have no phase shift if bobbing the coil up-down for say 20cm from soil level , so the peak-peak amplitude rise due to to bobbing coil up-down is made of a positive and negative components of equal amplitude, thus resulting in no change in amplitude at geb channel cause of moving coil up-down during e.g. a sweep cycle.
This, virtually, eliminate any ground influence on amplitude of signal at geb channel; when a metal is near coil the effect will be always the same, rise or fall in amplitude due to phase shift (in diagram is fall but nevermind cause the negative half-wave slide to right due to metal presence).
About disc channel, instead, we can find a pi/2 (90°) shift for ideal sampling of a quadrature demodulator; in practical terms usually the sample is delayed a bit more and then a better "separation" of target composition is realized.
Since we are (on disc channel) sampling near the positive peak of wave and rx signal slide to right when metals are present, there will be positive readings for relative phase shifts under 90° or a bit more degrees, then after we'll see negative readings of amplitude for larger phase shifts.
This way, in that diagram, we'll end up with a positive reading for e.g. iron and a negative reading for the "coin".
Now, actually, what happens in Tesoro coils is the opposite we see in drawing, cause RX shift happens to the left respect TX reference but apart this the system works exactly like explained. Then e.g. inverting amplifiers will convert negative rise into a positive rise etc giving right signs to voltages.
I miss something along the road ?
Kind regards,
Max
Comment