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Contents
Assembly .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 2
Batteries ........................................................................................................................................................................................... 4
Quick Start .......................................................................................................................................................................... 8
Basic Adjustments ........................................................................................................................................................................ 14
1. Target Volume ............................................................................................................................................................. 18
2. Audio Threshold ......................................................................................................................................................... 18
3. Tone (Audio Frequency) ............................................................................................................................................ 19
4. Audio Disc. ................................................................................................................................................................. 19
5. Silent Search ............................................................................................................................................................... 20
6. Mixed Mode ............................................................................................................................................................... 21
7. A.C. Sensitivity .......................................................................................................................................................... 22
8. D.C. Sensitivity .......................................................................................................................................................... 22
9. Backlight .................................................................................................................................................................... 23
10. Viewing Angle ............................................................................................................................................................ 24
Pro Options ................................................................................................................................................................................... 25
Audio ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 27
1. Ratchet Pinpointing .................................................................................................................................................... 27
2. S.A.T. Speed ............................................................................................................................................................... 28
3. Tone I.D. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 29
4. V.C.O. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 29
5. Modulation ................................................................................................................................................................. 30
G.E.B./Trac ............................................................................................................................................................................... 30
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7. Trac View ................................................................................................................................................................... 31
8. Trac Speed .................................................................................................................................................................. 32
9. Trac Offset .................................................................................................................................................................. 33
10. Trac Inhibit ................................................................................................................................................................. 33
11. Coarse G.E.B. ............................................................................................................................................................. 34
12. Fine G.E.B. ................................................................................................................................................................. 35
Discrimination .......................................................................................................................................................................... 36
13. Disc. Edit .................................................................................................................................................................... 36
14. Block Edit .................................................................................................................................................................. 38
15-16. Learn Accept/Reject .............................................................................................................................................. 39
17. Recovery Speed .......................................................................................................................................................... 40
18. Bottlecap Reject ......................................................................................................................................................... 41
19. Hot Rock Reject ......................................................................................................................................................... 42
20. Sweep Speed .............................................................................................................................................................. 43
21. Ground Filtering ......................................................................................................................................................... 44
Display ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 45
22. Visual Disc. ................................................................................................................................................................ 45
23. Icons ........................................................................................................................................................................... 45
24. V.D.I. Sensitivity ........................................................................................................................................................ 46
25. D.C. Phase .................................................................................................................................................................. 47
26. Accumulate ................................................................................................................................................................. 48
27. Average ....................................................................................................................................................................... 48
28. Fade ............................................................................................................................................................................ 49
Preamp Gain ............................................................................................................................................................................. 50
29. Preamp Gain ............................................................................................................................................................... 50
Multi Frequency Method ......................................................................................................................................................... 51
30. 2 Frequency (Best Data) ............................................................................................................................................ 51
31. 2 Frequency (Correlate) ............................................................................................................................................. 51
32. V.D.I. Normalization .................................................................................................................................................. 52
33. 1 Frequency (3 kHz) .................................................................................................................................................. 52
34. 1 Frequency (15 kHz) ................................................................................................................................................ 52
EEPROM Programs ................................................................................................................................................................ 53-54
Program Settings Chart .......................................................................................................................................................... 55-56
Glossary ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 57
Warranty .................................................................................................................................................................................. 58-59
Warranty .................................................................................................................................................................................. 58-59
Service .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 60
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Summary of Contents for Whites DXF

  • Page 1: Table Of Contents

    ® Table of Contents Contents Page Assembly ......................................2 Batteries ......................................4 ™ Quick Start ..................................8 Basic Adjustments ..................................14 1. Target Volume ................................18 2. Audio Threshold ................................. 18 3. Tone (Audio Frequency) ............................19 4. Audio Disc.................................. 19 5.
  • Page 2: Assembly

    ™ Chapter 1 DFX Assembly Assembly Twist and insert each end of WASHERS handle (provided) through top BETWEEN of shipping carton into EACH LOOP LOOP OR SEARCH second flap. EAR & CLEVIS COIL (CARRY CARTON) CABLE RETAINERS DISPLAY 1/ PRESET PROGRAMS 2/ BASIC ADJUSTMENTS 3/ PRO OPTIONS 4/ TARGET ID NUMBERS...
  • Page 3: Assembly Instructions

    ™ Chapter 1 DFX Assembly Assembly Instructions 1. Remove all parts from shipping carton and readjust clevis/lower rod length with the spring check the assembly page to make sure all parts are clip buttons so that the search coil can be held near present.
  • Page 4: Batteries

    ™ Chapter 2 DFX Batteries Batteries Standard Battery Holder BATTERY CHECK VOLTS BLUE DECAL NICAD 14.0 6 LOW 1. The standard battery holder (blue decal) holds eight “AA” cell batteries. Alkalines are recom- mended for use with this battery holder. ARROW DOWN 2.
  • Page 5: Using The Standard Battery Holder

    Chapter 2 DFX ™ Batteries Using the Rechargeable Battery Standard Battery Holder 1. Slide open the battery holder lid (decal side of GREEN BATTERY DECAL battery holder) by applying gentle upward CHARGER pressure on the tab of the door so that it unlocks. Slide the door away from the battery box exposing the cell positions.
  • Page 6 ™ Chapter 2 DFX Batteries Charging Using the Battery Charger on Quick Charge Setting 1. There is no harm charg- ing overnight using the OVERNIGHT charge Any voltage reading setting regardless of the less than 8 volts- charge for 5 hours battery's current condition.
  • Page 7 Chapter 2 DFX™ Batteries Battery Life & Memory Volatile memory temporarily holds any program Use of maximum backlight may reduce battery life by up to 50%, depending on battery type. changes or settings not yet saved in a Custom Program. Short-term or volatile memory is retained Rechargeable batteries gradually deteriorate.
  • Page 8: Dxf ™ Quick Start

    ™ Chapter 3 DFX Quick Start ™ Quick Start ™ Quick Start Instructions ™ After you have assembled the DFX and inserted the battery pack, follow these simple steps to start treasure hunting! With the TRIGGER in the center position, SOFTWARE VERSION # press the ON/OFF control and an automatic...
  • Page 9 ™ Chapter 3 DFX Quick Start Search Fundamentals As the loop is swept over the ground, ignore the display and concentrate on the sounds the detector makes. As the loop is passed over metal that is likely trash, the sound will be inconsistent. Trash targets typi- cally produce a shorter, sputter-type sound, that is often broken or double in nature.
  • Page 10 ™ Chapter 3 DFX Quick Start Live Search Screen - what is it telling me? A. Sweep the loop over the target several times and VISUAL POSSIBLE TARGET IDENTITIES look at the SignaGraph ® . The SignaGraph® auto- DISCRIMINATION ("ICONS") INDICATION-V.D.I.
  • Page 11 Chapter 3 DFX ™ Quick Start Live Search Screen Samples Nickel, or Penny or a possible ring. dime. If the ¢ ¢ ¢ Sometimes a screw cap and small (or half) penny ICON pull tab will are displayed, produce this the target indication could be an...
  • Page 12: Pinpointing The Target

    ™ Chapter 3 DFX Quick Start Pinpointing the Target Once the decision has been made to dig, move the loop off to one side of the target area, squeeze and hold the TRIGGER on the handle, and "X" the loop over the spot where you believe the target to be.
  • Page 13 Chapter 3 DFX ™ Quick Start Ready to Dig Factory Preset Programs Permission - Prior to searching and digging you Reached from the MAIN MENU, the factory must have permission to search private property, PRESET PROGRAMS give a quick start for: from the owner or caretaker.
  • Page 14: Basic Adjustments

    Chapter 4 DFX ™ Basic Adjustments Basic Adjustments Basic Adjustments - what do they do? 1. TARGET VOLUME - How loud a target beeps when detected. 2. AUDIO THRESHOLD - The slight hum or background sound heard continuously during searching. 3.
  • Page 15 ™ Chapter 4 DFX Basic Adjustments More Basics "Hot Key" Shortcuts All the MENU items are tied together so that the "HOT KEYS" will save time as they allow easy ARROW up and down controls scroll through every access, from the search mode, to the most needed adjustments.
  • Page 16 ™ Chapter 4 DFX Basic Adjustments Custom EEPROM Programs PROGRAMS PG. 2/3 Saving Basic and Pro Option RELIC adjustments for future use. PROSPECTING TRASH Save custom settings in any one of four EEPROM program positions. They will remain permanently in USE THE ARROW KEYS TO SCROLL THE ™...
  • Page 17 Chapter 4 DFX ™ Basic Adjustments 4. To NAME, use the ARROW controls to select the scribed above. The old program can only be erased first symbol, number, or letter of the name and press when a new program is stored in that position. ENTER.
  • Page 18: Target Volume

    Chapter 4 DFX ™ Basic Adjustments 1. Target Volume 48 - 63 How loud a target beeps when detected. TARGET VOLUME Select TARGET VOLUME with the ARROW controls and press ENTER. The current volume level sounds continuously. The number designating the current level is shown on the right side of the Tip - Select the loudest comfortable level, lower...
  • Page 19: Tone (Audio Frequency)

    ™ Chapter 4 DFX Basic Adjustments 3. Tone (Audio Frequency) Selects the frequency or pitch of the sound the TONE(AUDIO FREQ) detector produces. Select TONE (AUDIO FREQ.) with the ARROW controls and press ENTER. The current TONE will sound continuously. The number designating Tip - If you have trouble the current level is shown on the right side of the hearing high frequencies...
  • Page 20: Silent Search

    ™ Chapter 4 DFX Basic Adjustments 5. Silent Search The ability of the detector to be operated without SILENT SEARCH the threshold or background hum that is normally heard continuously during operation. The instrument is silent until a target is detected. TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER Select SILENT SEARCH with the ARROW...
  • Page 21: Mixed Mode

    ™ Chapter 4 DFX Basic Adjustments 6. Mixed Mode A unique hybrid operating mode. It is an all-metal MIXED MODE (DC non-motion, non-discriminate) mode, working simultaneously with a discriminate (AC motion discrimination) mode. It is two modes, one TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER detecting everything and another discriminating, operating at the same time.
  • Page 22: Sensitivity

    ™ Chapter 4 DFX Basic Adjustments 7. A.C. Sensitivity Used to select the appropriate sensitivity (degree A.C. SENSITIVITY that the instrument is responsive to signals) while being used in the discriminate modes (those which require movement of the loop). Tip - Preset levels work Select A.C.
  • Page 23: Backlight

    ™ Chapter 4 DFX Basic Adjustments 9. Backlight Used in dark conditions to light the display, BACKLIGHT improving visibility. Select BACKLIGHT with the ARROW controls and press ENTER. Use the ARROW controls to Tip - Use only when select the desired BACKLIGHT level. The needed, and only as bright BACKLIGHT level will be visible on the display.
  • Page 24: Viewing Angle

    Chapter 4 DFX ™ Basic Adjustments 10. Viewing Angle Adjusts the display for visibility in low or high VIEWING ANGLE temperature conditions. Select VIEWING ANGLE with the ARROW controls and press ENTER, use the ARROW controls to make changes. The current level is Tip - In cold temperatures shown on the right side of the display.
  • Page 25: Pro Options

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options Pro Options (Overview) AUDIO AUDIO AUDIO AUDIO AUDIO 1. RATCHET PINPOINTING - Pinpoint feature, automatically detunes for center location. 2. S.A.T. SPEED - Self Adjusting Threshold or Auto-tune, automatically maintains threshold. 3. TONE I.D. - Assigns each V.D.I. target number its own special tone or sound. 4.
  • Page 26: Pro Options

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options Pro Options Basics of Pro Options The PRO OPTIONS are used to make the more MAIN MENU Screen intricate adjustments available on this model. The MAIN MENU PG. 1/1 PRO OPTIONS are divided into five major catego- PRESET PROGRAMS BASIC ADJUSTMENTS ries of menus, structured similar to the Basic...
  • Page 27: Audio

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (Audio section) 1. Ratchet Pinpointing Pinpointing feature, automatically detunes for easy RATCHET PINPOINTING target-center locating. ON - Automatically aids in pinpointing. When the TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER TRIGGER is squeezed and held for pinpointing, RATCHET PINPOINTING will shrink the size of Tips - Use the ON the signal as the loop is passed over the target area...
  • Page 28: Speed

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Audio section) 2. S.A.T. Speed Self-Adjusting Threshold (auto-tune) smooths the S.A.T. SPEED THRESHOLD, OFF (0), or ON (1-10). Without S.A.T. SPEED (a setting of 0), changes in the ground (and the passage of time) will tend to produce changes in the THRESHOLD sound.
  • Page 29: V.c.o

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Audio section) 3. Tone I.D. Assigns each V.D.I. number its own distinct tone TONE I.D. or pitch. Target ranges can easily be identified by their sound. The higher the V.D.I. number, the higher the pitch of their sound. Reject targets still TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER break up or "cutout".
  • Page 30: Modulation

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (Audio section) 5. Modulation Allows motion modes to produce different volume MODULATION levels based on target depth. Modulation is used in the discriminate or motion TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER modes. When ON, it allows the depth of the target to dictate the volume of the response.
  • Page 31: Autotrac

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (G.E.B./Trac section) ® 6. AutoTrac ® AUTOTRAC allows the instrument to automati- AUTO TRAC cally readjust the Ground Balance setting during searching. This readjustment allows for natural occurring changes in the ground mineral of an area. TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER By maintaining an accurate Ground Balance,...
  • Page 32: Trac Speed

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (G.E.B./Trac section) 8. Trac Speed ® Dictates when AUTOTRAC adjusts Ground AUTO TRAC SPEED Balance. Trac Speed allows adjustment of the amount of ground mineral change required to cause Autotracking to occur. At slower speeds (lower Tips - It is desirable to select a TRAC SPEED that numbers) it takes a significant change in the...
  • Page 33: Trac Offset

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (G.E.B./Trac section) 9. Trac Offset ® Allows AUTOTRAC to track ground minerals AUTO TRAC OFFSET either positive or negative in relationship to the correct setting (under, or over kill). ® TRAC OFFSET allows the AUTOTRAC feature to track the ground slightly more or less than what Tips - Recommended only...
  • Page 34: Coarse G.e.b

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (G.E.B./Trac section) 11. Coarse G.E.B. (Manual Ground Balance) allows viewing the COARSE G.E.B. current automatic Ground Balance setting (Air/ Ground Balance) and/or manual overriding of the automatic Ground Balance. COARSE & FINE G.E.B. (Ground Exclusion Tips - Use for controlled reactions to specific Balance, or ground rejection) allows manual...
  • Page 35: Fine G.e.b

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (G.E.B./Trac section) 12. Fine G.E.B. FINE G.E.B. is used to make smaller adjustments FINE G.E.B. to the Ground Balance range on either side of the COARSE setting. The FINE setting combines with the COARSE setting to determine the actual ground rejection level.
  • Page 36: Discrimination

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Discrimination section) 13. Disc. Edit Allows for changing which targets V.D.I. or refer- DISC. EDIT ence numbers are ACCEPTed (detected), or ACCEPT REJECTed, (discriminated out) within the current REJECT Program you are using. TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER Select DISC.
  • Page 37 ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options of targets it cannot readily identify. Therefore, if deeper you want to detect, the more trash you will positive +95 is ACCEPTed, questionable targets need to accept and dig. may be dug that indicate this number and can produce some interesting recoveries.
  • Page 38: Block Edit

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (Discrimination section) 14. BLOCK Edit Speeds major EDIT changes by dragging ACCEPT BLOCK EDIT or REJECT with ARROW controls. ACCEPT REJECT Allows major EDIT changes to be completed TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER quickly. EDIT is for individual V.D.I. number changes and/or viewing of the current settings.
  • Page 39: Learn Accept/Reject

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (Discrimination section) 15-16. Learn Accept/Reject Specific target samples can be used to show or LEARN ACCEPT teach the discriminator what metal targets you desire to ACCEPT or REJECT. TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER Select LEARN ACCEPT or LEARN REJECT with the ARROW controls and press ENTER to turn LEARN REJECT LEARN ON.
  • Page 40: Recovery Speed

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Discrimination section) 17. Recovery Speed Speeds target responses, so several targets that are RECOVERY SPEED close together can each respond. When a metal is detected, it takes a fraction of a second for the detector to process the signal before it can respond to another metal target nearby.
  • Page 41: Bottlecap Reject

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Discrimination section) 18. Bottlecap Reject Adjusts how strongly the instrument rejects or BOTTLECAP REJECT breaks up on iron. Most starting programs use the minimum setting. As larger numbers are selected, more bias rejection against iron occurs. Tips - If having difficulties recognizing the broken The advantage of higher BOTTLECAP REJECT...
  • Page 42: Hot Rock Reject

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Discrimination section) 19. Hot Rock Reject Hot rocks (rocks higher or different in mineraliza- HOT ROCK REJ. tion than the surrounding ground) respond as +95 on the V.D.I. scale. Unfortunately in some ground conditions very deep, small, or unusual real metal targets may also indicate +95.
  • Page 43: Sweep Speed

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Discrimination section) 20. Sweep Speed The quickness the loop or search coil is passed from SWEEP SPEED side to side is critical for modern metal detectors to perform properly regarding detection depth and discrimination. Sweep Speed is often a personal preference feature.
  • Page 44: Ground Filtering

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (Discrimination section) 21. Ground Filtering (High Pass Filters or GROUND FILTERING Differentiators) GROUND FILTERING is adjustable with the DFX. The first two primary filters are contained within the hardware (electrical parts). The remain- Tips - Metal detectors are ing filters are contained within the computer soft- often described or catego-...
  • Page 45: Display

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Display section) 22. Visual Disc. When ON, REJECTed V.D.I. numbers and their VISUAL DISC. associated ICONS are prevented from appearing on the display. When OFF, all V.D.I. numbers and associated ICONS appear. TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER VISUAL DISC.
  • Page 46: Sensitivity

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Display section) 24. V.D.I. Sensitivity Controls how strong a target must respond to V.D.I. SENSITIVITY produce a display indication, and controls a third digit (fraction) of the V.D.I. number. V.D.I. Sensitivity controls the intensity (strength) of the target signal needed to activate the display Tips - Lower V.D.I.
  • Page 47: Phase

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (Display section) 25. D.C. Phase Measurement of the ground mineralization, or D.C. PHASE measuring the phase (V.D.I. reference number) of a specific metal target during pinpointing. TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER When D.C. PHASE is ON, and the TRIGGER Tips - In specific ground squeezed and released, normal searching begins.
  • Page 48: Accumulate

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Display section) 26. Accumulate ® ON combines SignaGraph information over GRAPH ACCUMULATE ® multiple loop passes, OFF shows SignaGraph information only from the last sweep of the loop. TO CHANGE PRESS ENTER ® Accumulate allows the SignaGraph to continually collect information.
  • Page 49: Fade

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options (Display section) 28. Fade ® Clears or fades noncurrent SignaGraph informa- FADE RATE tion (bars). FADE allows past information to automatically ® clear or fade from the SignaGraph . Without Fade, ® or with too slow of a FADE rate, the SignaGraph Tips - Recommended for all but the SINGLE will fill with information that is no longer valid as...
  • Page 50: Preamp Gain

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ Pro Options (Preamp Gain section) 29. Preamp Gain Selects the intensity of the signal received from the PREAMP GAIN loop. PREAMP GAIN (called Signal Balance on some models) is used to promote stability and perfor- mance. Like a sensitivity control, too much Tips - Higher levels increase detection depth.
  • Page 51: Multi Frequency Method

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options Multi Frequency Method Only one of the four available multifrequency (Multi Frequency Method section) methods, BEST DATA, CORRELATE, 1 kHz, and 15 kHz, can be "ON" at any one given time. 30. 2 Frequency (Best Data) For example if BEST DATA is "ON", the re- 2 FREQ.
  • Page 52: Normalization

    ™ Chapter 5 DFX Pro Options Normalization OFF 15 kHz 3 kHz 6.5 kHz (Multi Frequency Method section) 32. V.D.I. Normalization V.D.I. NORMALIZED Normalization OFF chart for 3 kHz expands the high (copper/silver) end of the scale and compresses the low (foil/nickel) end of the scale. In the 15 kHz mode the opposite occurs. The high end compresses and the low end expands.
  • Page 53: Eeprom Programs

    Chapter 5 DFX ™ EEPROM Programs Factory Pre-Loaded Custom EEPROM Programs To use a custom EEPROM Program Simply; White’s has pre-loaded each of the four custom 1. Turn the detector ON and wait for the EEPROM Program positions for you. These pro- Main Menu.
  • Page 54 Chapter 5 DFX ™ EEPROM Programs Pre-Loaded EEPROM Programs EEPROM DP-SILVER (Deep Silver) EEPROM DEMO A good general purpose program where the Primarily a showroom or bench program for majority of the trash is iron and small/ testing or demonstrating, likely the first medium foil and the majority of the ex EEPROM slot an individual would choose to pected targets are coins.
  • Page 55: Program Settings Chart

    Preset Program Settings JEWELRY COIN & RELIC COIN PROSPECT & BEACH JEWELRY BASIC ADJUSTMENTS: TARGET VOLUME 48 - 63 AUDIO THRESHOLD 0 - 42 TONE (AUDIO FREQ.) 0 - 255 AUDIO DISC. ON/OFF SILENT SEARCH ON/OFF MIXED-MODE ON/OFF A.C. SENSITIVITY 1 - 85 D.C.
  • Page 56 Custom EEPROM Program Settings EEPROM EEPROM EEPROM EEPROM NOTES DEMO HI-PRO DP-SILVER HI-TRASH BASIC ADJUSTMENTS: TARGET VOLUME 48 - 63 AUDIO THRESHOLD 0 - 42 TONE (AUDIO FREQ.) 0 - 255 AUDIO DISC. ON/OFF SILENT SEARCH ON/OFF MIXED-MODE ON/OFF A.C. SENSITIVITY 1 - 85 D.C.
  • Page 57: Glossary

    Glossary Glossary Glossary All-Metal: Any mode or control setting allowing total acceptance of all metal types, iron, aluminum, tin, nickel, gold, brass, lead, copper, silver etc. Audio ID: Circuitry which produces different audio tones (pitch) for different target's conductivity. Black Sand: One of the most extreme components of non-conductive, negative ground minerals. Magnetic. Also called Magnetite (Fe304) or magnetic iron oxide.
  • Page 58: Warranty

    Owner Info WARRANTY TRANSFER WARRANTY TRANSFER WARRANTY TRANSFER WARRANTY TRANSFER WARRANTY TRANSFER ™ If for any reason you should sell your Spectrum DFX prior to the date the warranty expires, the remaining warranty is transferable. This transfer is authorized by calling 1-800- 547-6911, and getting an Authorization Number.
  • Page 59 Owner Info WHITE'S ELECTRONICS INC. WHITE'S ELECTRONICS INC. WHITE'S ELECTRONICS INC. WHITE'S ELECTRONICS INC. WHITE'S ELECTRONICS INC. LIMITED WARRANTY STATEMENT LIMITED WARRANTY STATEMENT LIMITED WARRANTY STATEMENT LIMITED WARRANTY STATEMENT LIMITED WARRANTY STATEMENT If within two years (24 months) from the original date of purchase, your White's detector fails due to defects in either material or workmanship, White's will repair or replace at its option, all necessary parts without charge for parts or labor.
  • Page 60: Service

    White's Service Centers White's Authorized Service Centers White's Authorized Service Centers White's Authorized Service Centers White's Authorized Service Centers White's Authorized Service Centers Geoquest White's Electronics Electronic Exploration 106 US Hwy 46 1011 Pleasant Valley Rd. 700 South Main Saddlebrook, NJ 07663 Sweet Home, OR 97386 Lombard, IL 60148 (973) 772-7443...

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