Originally posted by Tinkerer
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Take a limited number of common targets (coins, rings, pulltabs, etc.) and record the samples for each target at different distances from the coil. Then plot these on a graph for comparison.
Although this experiment appears relatively simple , it is complicated by the balancing of the IB coil. For anyone else to duplicate your results, they would need to have their coils set up in the exactly the same way.
This is why simulation is going to be tricky, to say the least. I've had this working successfully in SPICE for a VLF (with the correct phase-shifts) so that it matches reality, but it's a matter of working with both a prototype and the simulator at the same time to fine tune the models. In this particular case, we would also need to take measurements on the real circuit, and then add the findings to the simulator. Many times people get bogged down in simulations, and they forget that it's just another tool. SPICE simulations are extremely useful for getting you in the right ballpark, but eventually you have to build a real circuit. It's then that you find out which of your assumptions were correct, and which were not. Then you can go back and refine the models to match reality, and in the process make other discoveries.
So, what I'm trying to say, is that (in this case) we need a number of real world measurements, before exploring more deeply with the simulator, because of the added complication of using an IB coil, which also has an unknown setup ..... if that's clear?

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