Find boundary markers WITHOUT a metal detector (Part2)

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  • čas přidán 25. 10. 2019
  • (Part 2) Find boundary markers WITHOUT a metal detector.
    (Part 1) • Find boundary markers ... "Dip Needle"
    My adventure survival novel: amzn.to/3bPXOqR
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Komentáře • 60

  • @nilsgerdes6747
    @nilsgerdes6747 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you so much! I have the exact same box but now i know for what and how to use it! Such a specific use, wouldn't have found it out for centuries!

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 lety +1

      Hahahahah Centuries! love it! Yes I was introduced to this little box in the early to mid 70's.........but don't tell anybody (then they will know how old I am!) :-0

    • @nilsgerdes6747
      @nilsgerdes6747 Před 3 lety

      @@TommyBoy3D As a Gamer I believe we level up instead of getting older :-D I have no idea how this detector came to be here in Germany. I did some research and properties aren't even Marked this way. If at all they will ram a Measuring Point in the ground with a visible cap.
      This metal detecor also is great for bets in bars :-D
      Again, thanks so much! You have no idea how hard this little gadtes stumped us!

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 lety +1

      Nils Gerdes I love it! Thanks for the post!

  • @SteveJaeger
    @SteveJaeger Před 7 měsíci

    Awesome video, thanks for making this!

  • @ygtbsm764
    @ygtbsm764 Před 4 lety

    Nice job! Very helpful!

  • @elric40
    @elric40 Před 4 měsíci

    This device is an "Aqua Magnetic Valve Locator" Every Surveyor in the 60's and 70's had one. I still have my Dad's in my desk...lol. A compass will work.

  • @chrisemler9681
    @chrisemler9681 Před 2 lety

    link to buy that dip needle please???

  • @WJRHalyn-jw2ho
    @WJRHalyn-jw2ho Před 4 lety +2

    02:52 - "I'm gonna go left..." - - - Moves it right.
    ???????
    Oh.... the other left.....

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 4 lety +1

      Hahahahaha, well I was filming with my left hand.....😉...must have gotten confused! Thanks for watching and commenting.

  • @1life857
    @1life857 Před 3 lety

    Where did you buy it, can you please provide a link? Great job!

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před rokem

      They are very hard to find. But keep looking on ebay.

    • @billhickey395
      @billhickey395 Před 10 měsíci

      There are a few on ebay.

  • @Xx_eeveemocha_xX
    @Xx_eeveemocha_xX Před 3 měsíci

    I got pin in my backyard already … need to find one in the front … it so hard to find it .. any tip? I bought metal detectors at Academy sport and another small one on amazon but still can’t find it … any tip where the pin can be at ? Near side walk or somewhere side of my house ?

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 měsíci

      I would start at the back of walk. Then work towards the house along the line. Find out the right of way width and measure back from the center of the street (if you can do it safely) and see if it falls at the back of walk or farther in. Good luck.

    • @Xx_eeveemocha_xX
      @Xx_eeveemocha_xX Před 3 měsíci

      Any good metal detector u think it work? Your link is not work anymore… I bought one at academy sport onsale for $99 didn’t hear sound when I test on other pin🤔

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 měsíci

      Any detector should work. Make sure the sensitivity is up high and you don’t have iron screened out.

    • @Xx_eeveemocha_xX
      @Xx_eeveemocha_xX Před 3 měsíci

      I bought $200 one still can’t find it 😩

  • @919Drones
    @919Drones Před rokem

    I just purchased this Antique Surveyers Compass. Is there any chance I can get the instructions. Preferably hardcopy or PDF.
    Thanks in advance,
    Bruce

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před rokem

      Hey Bruce if you are talking about the instrument in my video it’s a “Dip needle” used for finding iron objects in the ground. May not be the surveyors compass that you bought. I don’t know.

    • @919Drones
      @919Drones Před rokem

      @@TommyBoy3D Vintage Surveyors Compass Aqua Survey & Instrument Co. Magnetic Locator USA

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před rokem +1

      Ok then. Watch both parts of my video about this device. I do not know where to get any other information but I have used it many times. I think I explain it fairly well. Thanks for watching!

  • @anthonytomasso5973
    @anthonytomasso5973 Před 10 měsíci

    That’s awesome!Where can you buy that tool?

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 10 měsíci

      You have to search it on line. Hard to get.

  • @mts7274
    @mts7274 Před rokem +1

    You can buy a new metal detector for like half the price of the Dip Needle that you are using here.

  • @myownspiritlevel
    @myownspiritlevel Před 3 lety +1

    Wonder if a regular magnetic compass would work. Get it near iron and it starts going berzerk.

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 lety +1

      Well A dip needle is a compass turned sideways. The image you see is from a mirror. The iron pulls the red end down and you see the black in the mirror.

    • @cooljazz8
      @cooljazz8 Před 2 lety

      Most regular compasses would not work well, because they're made to be used only in the horizontal position, and the needle would not turn freely as it does in that special device.

  • @michaelsullivan1216
    @michaelsullivan1216 Před 4 lety

    I assume this dip needle works much like a metal detector. Unfortunately, won't work for me. A few years ago, my neighbor had landscape netting installed on the slope near our pin to hold seed in place. Not only did the landscaper pull the wooden stake I had there, but they staked the landscape netting with metal stakes. My metal detector goes crazy on that corner. I've found plenty of metal stakes, but no property pin.

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 4 lety

      I'm sorry to hear that. You have an unusual situation... : ( Thanks for watching and stay safe.

    • @WJRHalyn-jw2ho
      @WJRHalyn-jw2ho Před 4 lety +1

      Actually, a metal detector beams radio waves into the ground and attempts to detect what bounces back.
      A dip needle is just a magnetic compass on its side... it's sensitive to any ferrous metals near to it.

    • @SeattleRingHunter
      @SeattleRingHunter Před 3 lety

      @@WJRHalyn-jw2ho key word metals near it. We expect much deeper penetration from a proper metal detector and can detect for iron specifically. If you need an area search for a metal pin contact a finder at TheRingFinders.com Cheers, #SeattleRingHunter

    • @WJRHalyn-jw2ho
      @WJRHalyn-jw2ho Před 3 lety

      @@SeattleRingHunter Of course. I have a couple of each. The detector's great for deep stuff, the "deflecting magnet" only works for magnet-friendly materials; the bigger, the better.
      Nicely placed ad, though! 😉

  • @garrettandrews79
    @garrettandrews79 Před rokem

    Great video. I am having boundary issues now. Our community was staked in 1946 with these same cast iron rods. Only problem was that Schneider Geospatial replaced those rods with zinc magnetic pins in the early 90s.
    Then the county paved our private road about 8 years ago and plastered these galvanized rods 30 feet from center of road on both sides giving them easement rights for future widening and development. Property owners then swear by these lowes or home depot galvanized rods as testament. Surveyor's also buy into the magic galvanized rods placement theory too.
    The original deed Platt in your county office is the only authority. I hear surveyors regionally tell potential customers how their deeds, platts, county accessors and Schneider Geospatial are all wrong and clueless 😂😂. Drones will take over the human element soon. I saw a drone shoot dye within 3 inches of a boundary pin with great accuracy. 2 other surveyors were off by 72 and 104 feet respectfully.😮
    Get a survey drone that utilizes star link gps connection and enter the coordinates. Consumer GPS on your cellphone on landglide has a room of error between 10-18 feet in diameter depending on the weather conditions and foliage. The survey pin magnetic detector will locate the pin via the dye within 1.5-4 inches everytime. Most modern boundary pins have a tiny hexagon head and will have nasty old nylon rope or faded pink property tape fiercely wrapped on the base.

  • @currantresident9615
    @currantresident9615 Před 3 lety +1

    How about putting a link to "Part 1" and "dip needle" in the top of this page?

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 lety

      Great idea and thank you! Thanks for watching also.

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 lety

      Done! It is in the description for this video shown above. Thx for the tip!

    • @TamaraGrace
      @TamaraGrace Před 3 lety

      All of your videos related to land surveying, I'd put links in the description for them also. And please post more and you'll get more subs... But yes, I'm scanning your all your videos for anything to do with land surveying. If you had them all listed in your description, with their titles, it'd make this much easier...

  • @James_Bowie
    @James_Bowie Před 3 lety

    Very interesting. 👍 Now that you have found that boundary marker, what are you going to do about making it easier in future? Put some sort of cap over it?

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 lety

      Not sure. Don't ever plan on doing anything around that front corner. I'll just find it again if I have to. Thanks for watching!

  • @retiredman
    @retiredman Před 3 lety

    I have one just like it I’ve been using it for years

  • @safinjoy
    @safinjoy Před 4 lety +2

    what is the instrument called?

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 4 lety +3

      This instrument is called a "dip needle" I give a link to one in my part one video.

    • @safinjoy
      @safinjoy Před 4 lety

      @@TommyBoy3D thank you :)

  • @user-iw5wr2sp2u
    @user-iw5wr2sp2u Před 21 dnem

    Little black box?
    Well, WHAT IS this?
    WHERE do I get one????

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 21 dnem +1

      They are hard to find, expensive and take some time to learn. This is a two-part video so check out part one for more information. Thinking it through. Today I would probably go with a cheap metal detector. Thanks for watching!

  • @phrotojoe
    @phrotojoe Před 3 lety +1

    Finally,,someone knows what they are talking about,,That is a great instrument and cheaper that a ferromagnetic locator for $1000 dollars,,you must be a land surveyor ------I'm retired surveyor after 42 years of walking through swamps,mountains,snow,rain,nasty neighbors,dogs,rattle snakes,tics,ass holes with guns,pot farms,pig farms,unmarked graves,roadrage roads,cliffs,bulls,electric fences,quick sand,poison ivy,bears,ground bee's,machette wounds,sticks in eyes,sticks in ears,police,state troopers.cops braking into your home and harrassing your sick wife,court order to walk on land,police backup for being threatend,shot at ,shot at again,and again and again,,,,,threatend, .,,,,but the good times are watching nudist playing on a beach,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před 3 lety +1

      God almighty knows Sir!......46 years experience here! And I can say I have experienced all that (with the exception of the cliffs being a Florida land surveyor)....but then I can throw in alligators to your mix Sir! Thanks for watching! God Bless! SUBBED!

    • @LMaria312You2
      @LMaria312You2 Před rokem

      Wow, I thought I had an issue, you REALLY have done it all. wish you were here in Southern Cali.

  • @thatsmydawg
    @thatsmydawg Před rokem

    Just bought one for $25.i metal detect so i found this interesting

  • @wmitrader
    @wmitrader Před 3 lety +3

    So I can use a dip needle that typically costs $300, or I can use a metal detector that costs $100 or less. And I can also use the metal detector to find coins, jewelry, gold, treasure, etc. Hmmmm .......

  • @jackrasmussen4467
    @jackrasmussen4467 Před rokem

    As a land and construction surveyor for 23 years I find this a joke.

    • @TommyBoy3D
      @TommyBoy3D  Před rokem +4

      No problem Jack, you see 23 years ago when you started surveying...............I already had been surveying 27 years. So yes, it was our go-to pin and pipe finder in 1972……….. 50 years in the field here………... Thanks for watching!