More or less 4 months ago I went to a farm near Arandas, Jalisco in México.
In the present this farm is not inhabited as a home and the owners just go there to maintain it. Among the premises there is a chapel where the corps of 4 people are buried, among them the bodies of the owners of the house and the chapel in the XIX century.
That day I had searched 6 has with the PDC210 and it had given me no signal. When I entered the chapel to go on searching and it gave the signal of something very small in each of the tombs of the 4 people. I did not consider correct to profanate the tombs, much less for something really small, maybe a medallion, a watch, a tooth, a ring or some other personal object. What surprised me most was the fact that when I approached the altar of the chapel the PDC started to emit constant beeps when pointed to a column. Between the column and the PDC there was a chandelier which I considered suspicious.
It was placed on a cement shelf. I took it and put it on a table nearby and to my surprise the detector did not emit more beeps when pointed to the column.
I pointed it to the chandelier and at first it did not beep but when I got nearer, at a distance of approximately 0.5468yd / 50cm the detector emitted constant beeps indicating it has found something.
It was a clear signal as I had heard from Mr. Damásio and Paulinho “Whenever a gold object is located, the detector will give constant beeps, even without moving it , if the object is medium-sized, or big” , just as it happened with the chandelier.
I have to make clear that the detector started to beep at a distance of 0.5468yd / 50cm approx. This was most surely due to the fact that the ionic field did not develop much as the chandelier was not buried. There were other chandeliers in the aerea to which the PDC reacted in the same way. Apparently the actual owners of the farm believed the chandeliers were just tin or some other metal and they did not suppose they were actually gold, that is why they stayed there untouched along the years. Feedback sent by Mr. Enrique Casas Mendoza
(telephone and email available upon request).