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🔍 Unlock Hidden Treasures Anywhere, Anytime!
The Bounty Hunter TK4 Tracker IV is a versatile, all-terrain metal detector featuring an 8-inch waterproof coil, three detection modes, and up to 30 hours of battery life. Designed for both adults and kids, it offers rugged durability and intuitive controls, making it the perfect tool for serious treasure hunters and hobbyists alike. Proudly made in the USA with a 5-year limited warranty.

























| ASIN | B00005A3L1 |
| Adjustable Length | Yes |
| Are Batteries Required | Yes |
| Batteries Required? | Yes |
| Battery Average Life | 30 Hours |
| Best Sellers Rank | #4,361 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ( See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ) #6 in Metal Detectors |
| Brand | Bounty Hunter |
| Brand Name | Bounty Hunter |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 14,762 Reviews |
| Display Type | LCD |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00089723400045 |
| Included Components | Metal detector |
| International Protection Rating | IP54 |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 10"L x 6.25"W x 28.25"H |
| Item Length | 8 Inches |
| Item Type Name | Metal detector |
| Item Weight | 1270 Grams |
| Manufacturer | First Texas Products, LLC |
| Manufacturer Part Number | 3410001 |
| Manufacturer Warranty Description | FIVE YEAR LIMITED |
| Material | Metal |
| Material Type | Metal |
| Model Number | TK4 |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| UPC | 089723400045 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| search coil size | 20.32 Centimeters |
I**L
Easy to use and reliable
We bought this because my husband lost his wedding ring in the yard in some tall grass. We looked for it for 4 nights in a row, but ordered this after not finding it the first night. It came in the fifth day and we found the ring in 5 minutes. Extremely easy to use, my nieces (5 & 10) enjoyed getting to use it. They have each asked for their own as gifts. It was easy to plop in the car and drive over to where we lost it, it took up no space, and was super easy to setup.
W**N
Great for casual metal detecting.
As a low cost metal detector I give this thing five stars. I bought this Detector several months back and enjoy it's relative ease of use, and it DOES find what you are searching for (coins, rings, earings, necklaces, etc). The other reviews here pretty much wrap it up as a good (affordable!) unit, but I wanted to make a few comments from an amateur's point of view: - This detector has, of course, the discrimination circuitry used to tell the difference between the various metals helping you to avoid digging up junk like soda can pull tabs which are everywhere. It does work pretty good, BUT - I have found that by using the Tracker IV discriminator, you will most likely be missing some good stuff. I have gone back over "Discriminated" areas again in "All Metal" mode and found some nice stuff that Discriminate didn't catch. Granted I am no pro, but the fact is if you want to get every coin, every ring, or every cool item of various metals, you may want to consider just using "All Metal" mode. I almost exclusively use it now and although I sift through some absolute junk. I have found a bunch of coins, necklaces, pendants, etc that I would have otherwise missed. Use the Discriminate mode when looking for that gold wedding ring your wife through at you in the back yard... - Invest in the 4 inch "Gold Nugget Coil" which is far superior at pinpointing metal. The stock coil works fine but is a tad ambiguous as to precisely where your coin, ring, (or pull tab) is. The smaller coil reduces search time and I am glad I have one. - I bought the recommended Bounty Hunter Headphones (to save battery power), but have found them to be a bit more trouble than help. When I detect something I squat or sit down and dig. I set the detector down so the coil is near the dig zone so I can waive clumps of dirt (or sand) in front of the coil as I search. The problem is the headphone's wire tends to be always in the way when I perform this move. I get tired of "untangling" so I don't use them anymore. Maybe I'm just getting old. - The meter is of no value for anyone who can hear the audible report. It has no "range" to judge metals you are passing over. It simply swings hard to the right no matter what from what I can tell. I have tried different modes and different metals to test it, but it seems to merely swing hard to the right as you pass over any type of metal / alloy. I can see how this would still be useful to a deaf person, but it just as easily could have been a bright light bulb instead of a meter. I won't ding this low cost detector for that though because I'd still dig if it was half scale or pegged. - And lastly a warning. If you go into a park, or any area attended by kids, you will be spotted. Within a short amount of time you will be surrounded by kids "helping you" to dig up buried treasure. At that point you have to decide whether to be a meanie and bark at them, or write the rest of the hunt off and let them shred the area every time the detector beeps. I generally tell them how it's been a long day and "see ya" since they will invariably have their hands in there digging away no matter what you say...
J**K
Bounty Hunter TRACKERIV/TK4-PL Tracker IV Metal Detector
I have had little experience with metal detectors, except for having built one once about 40 years ago as a project I found in an electronics magazine. I still understand in principle how these devices work from that experience and from a general background in electronics. Basically a balanced circuit is produced in the two coils at the end of the unit. When the flux lines in the coils are changed by induced eddy currents (by passing near a metal object), a difference signal is generated from the unbalanced conditions which lets the operator know that something has changed in the field of the detector coil. BTW, this is why one must move the coil in order to induce a signal. A static coil does not experience any changes. Different metal groups produce different phase responses, which allow for some rough discrimination of the type of metal producing the response. My point is that these things can finicky as most anything that changes the reluctance of a tuned circuit will generate a difference signal. So the trick is to just generate a signal when an object of interest is passed over. All of that said, I am favorably impressed with the operation of this moderately priced unit. It is rugged. It is very stable. It is sensitive without being too sensitive so that too many false signals are generated. The notch filter function seems to work well. It does not seem to be much affected by soil mineralization (at least in my yard) or soil moisture levels. I purchased the unit to find nails in the yard. I had my roof replaced a couple of months ago and even though the crew did an excellent job and ran magnetic nail sweeps over and over the yard, I could still go out with a powerful hand held magnet mounted on a short wooden handle and find nails. After several weeks of this sporadic activity, I realized that if I were to have a shot at finding 99.9% of the extant nails, I would need a better way to detect them. Hence this detector. I use the detector in the non-discrimiating mode and have found nails that were obviously left over from when the house was built almost 20 years ago! For this purpose it has worked and worked well. I have even done a small amount of digging to get the long buried metal up and out of the yard for no other reason than I can locate it and then retrieve it. No treasure, so far. Learning to narrow down the source of a signal by making "X" sweeps takes a bit of practice. After only a few minutes, however, even a novice such as I can quickly get an idea of whether the object is on or under the surface and if it is iron/steel or not. The grand daughters, 6 going on 7, and 9 going on 14, have taken to this device in a big way. Let me explain. I salted two areas of my rather large yard with 1- $1 coin, 5 quarters, 5 dimes, five nickels, and five pennies each. These areas were well removed from one another. I made sure that the coins were not very visible, but otherwise were dropped randomly. When the grand daughters last came to visit, I asked them to help me find treasure in my yard. I produced two wadded up "treasure maps" and let them select which one they wanted. Then I showed them the metal detector and explained how it worked. I had a minute timer along with two baggies labeled with their names in my pocket. The timer was to keep the peace as each girl got ten minutes alternately. The baggies were to keep the loot separate and separated. I believe the 6.5 year old would still be out there looking, if we had not forced her to come in that evening. All in all the youngest found all but 6¢ but oddly enough, she ended up with 4¢ more than I had planted. You see, she found a dime that I had not put there! The older one came up 11¢ short and was most disappointed that her sister had found more than she! As a bonus, they did find 7 nails that I had not expected to find as these were in areas well removed from the perimeter of the house. I also had an opportunity to explain to the older one that this was an application of science, where she could use a device to sense things that she could not see, hear, or feel. This made an impression on her, I could tell. They want to come back and do this again! Suits me fine. So what does this have to do with a review of a purchase? This unit has worked well in not only my hands but in the little, inexperienced, and often clumsy hands of two children (after shortening the pole). It is light enough in weight that neither I nor the children had any difficulty using it. The smaller did have to use two hands, however. I am pleased with it in general, but I have yet to test it for unsalted "coin shooting" (I love that term), relic hunting, prospecting, or general treasure hunting as in finding objects of value say at a public beach, park, etc. I would recommend it as a good, affordable, general purpose metal detector, with the caveat that I have few benchmarks such as how a higher end unit would perform for comparison, such as a unit that worked by pulse induction, for example.
T**R
A Good, Reliable Beginner Metal Detector
The detector model works as described. It is a basic starter model good for beginners who aren't sure they want to get into detecting, but they want a detector that will work and find metals. Follow the training, by book or online, and it makes sense how to operate. Otherwise you will get confused and frustrated not understanding how signals are interpreted or triggered. The unit does discriminate between irons and other metals as well once you know the settings. Depth is usually about 4 inches deep reliably. This is where better models will find more but again, this is an entry detector for a budget and low financial risk.
J**E
Exceeded expectations
This is not the best metal detector out there but it may very well be the best entry level metal detector on the market. It's tough and simple enough for kids to use, but also sophisticated enough for adults wanting to explore the hobby. This is my first metal detector and I have used it for about 20 hours now (only over soil). It excels at finding coins and I have also found jewelry and relics (old iron or metal). When I first began using it, I was a bit frustrated because I did not take the time to learn how to use it. It literally beeped at everything. Then I took the time to go online and read about how to use it properly. After that, I really started to score. I highly recommend searching online for "recommended Bounty Hunter Tracker IV settings" before you go hunting so you can learn a bit about that. Bounty Hunter also has a nice online guide that describes how to use the detector in a variety of situations (gold, beach, coins, etc). This unit has three modes, all metal, tone, and discrimination. I use it on tone most of the time because I am looking for coins. To use the tone mode properly, you must learn the recommended settings (Sensitivity around 4 and Discrimination at 11) and then complete an "air test," which means that before you ever go digging, you take the unit and pass different items (gold, silver, foil, pull tabs, nickel) across the coil to learn how they sound. I have found many, many coins after learning the importance of this. If you want, you can even bury different items in the ground so you can learn how they sound in soil. Practice makes perfect as they say. I have read that people have had trouble with the lack of pin point function but I have found that it's pretty easy if you sweep and listen. Listen for the strongest signal as you sweep and note that the sound occurs when the coin passes the center of the coil. If you want to go coin hunting, you will also need to buy a decent pinpointer. A pinpointer helps you determine where the coin is in the ground or in the dirt you just removed. I first bought a Bounty Hunter pinpointer that worked fine. I later upgraded to a Garrett Propointer (that costs more than the detector itself) and like it a lot better. If you're just into this to explore the hobby, you can either do without the pinpointer or buy the Bounty Hunter one. My only real complaint is that this unit lacks a depth function that would help me determine how deep a target is. All in all, this is a very functional metal detector. I plan on keeping mine even if I eventually buy a more sophisticated detector.
T**N
From an experienced Treasure hunter
I have been doing this for 35 years and this is my 4th detector. My last one was a top of the line and had to part with it to raise money when I was out of work. I decided it was time to once again buy one and the price seemed right. Of course I cannot compare it to a $300 detector ( at the time ), you do really get what you pay for. Here is my take so far. The bad : No volumn control, one level fits all sound. Also, it was hard as heck to pinpoint the target. With my last detector, when I dug the hole, you simply placed the coil over the hole and found the object. With this unit, it only works when moving so you have to wave it back and forth while digging to locate the target. The good: It is super light weight, made almost 100% from plastic. You won't get tired as fast. Takes 2 9v batteries.( Batteries while wearing headphones last about 15-20 hours ) Probably ok for a beginner, however if you are an avid hunter and you can afford, spend at least $200.Once I find enough to pay this one off, I am going back to a better model. This model will NOT go deeper than about 6" on a quarter and to find older silver coins, this model won't work. I have challenged Bounty Hunter manufacturing to prove me wrong but they actually agreed with my test. They said they sell a more expensive model if you want more depth. UPDATE 2: OK have used for 1 month now and have found a total of $200.00 in gold jewelry. I know that because a reputable dealer paid me that amount for what I have found so far. I have now paid off the detector in just a months time. I am more impressed now, however, if you are wanting to find old deep silver coins you have two choices, buy a better machine, or use this one on all metal mode, go real slow and dig about 1000 lbs of trash for every coin found then still no guarantee.Also, with my old detector, you just held the detector over your hole and it beeped if item was still there. This detector is a motion detector so you have to swing it for it to work so pinpointing is litteraly a pain. By the end of the first day my shoulders were sore. * If you want a decent detector to just find recently lost coins around playground equipment, this detector is awesome with its three mode detection. If you want to do some serious silver hunting or looking for old deep buried coins,forget it. It is however great at finding old soda cans up to 12" deep. Maybe you can dig them all day and cash in the aluminum, you should be able to pay off the detector in maybe 75 years. Overall, like I said, Bounty hunter is one of the 5 oldest detector companies around but most of their equipment is geared towards beginners. UPDATE: 2013. Even though I kept the Bounty Hunter for a back up detector, Once I got back on my feet and was hooked again in metal detector, I did some research and ended up going mad and paying $1,800.00 for a metal detector. I have found more with the new one in 16 months than all 4 other detectors over 35 years. I am still glad I bought the Bounty Hunter and keep it as a back up cause it is so darn easy to use. Plus it triple paid for itself in less then 5 months.
R**N
Great tool for finding lost arrows—and more
I picked up the Bounty Hunter TK4 Metal Detector to help locate arrows I’d lost during target shooting and hunting, and it has delivered. It’s been a game-changer for tracking down arrows in brush, grass, and even soft ground where I normally would have just given up. The waterproof coil is a nice bonus for pond-side or wet terrain use. Beyond arrows, I’ve started using it just for fun to find interesting metal objects around the yard and nearby trails. It spots coins, old nails, and other surprises I never expected to find, and that added hobby element is surprisingly enjoyable. What stands out: It’s intuitive to use—turn it on, sweep the coil, and when you get the signal you know something’s there. The sensitivity is good enough for shallow arrowheads or aluminum vanes, so I’m not missing much in my usual hunting spots. Durable build and waterproofing give me the confidence to use it in less-ideal terrain (muddy ground, wet grass, etc). My only caveat: If the target arrow is buried pretty deep or in super dense cover, I still sometimes struggle—so it’s not perfect in every scenario. As with any detector, you’ll still need to dig or clear the area once it signals. Bottom line: For the money, this detector is a smart investment if you’re tired of losing arrows or just want a fun side hobby digging up hidden metal. I’d highly recommend it.
J**T
Decent metal detector for a "novice"/beginner
I've never had -- or even used -- a metal detector before. I bought this one on a whim, to look for buried items in my yard. It was inexpensive, arrived quickly, was easy to install, and easy to figure out how to use. On my very first attempt to use it, I found several metal objects buried in my yard. Unfortunately, most tended to be old nails or other worthless/useless trinkets. But it found them. I did play with some of the controls to filter out such things, and those settings seemed to work properly when I tested items that I'd already discovered and dug up. But I tend to leave it set to alert for anything, because you never know whether the thing it's skipping is something important or not. Anyway, I heartily recommend this to beginners/novices. I'm sure there are better, fancier metal detectors out there, but this one was inexpensive and seemed to work really well.
V**H
Worth buying
Working fine
P**R
Mycket bra😀
Helt ok 👍
H**T
Very good
Excellent product 👍
M**T
bon detecteur
bon détecteur pour le prix rien a redire seule petit bémole aucune notice en français méme en cherchant sur le net quel galére . je recommande ce produit
A**Y
Bounty hunter indeed.
Okay so i have done a bit metal detecting years ago and spent about £350 on a fisher detector which was very good. As i wanted to get back into this hobby i originally started looking on e-bay but soon realised that the prices were just silly for older detectors and also secondhand newer detectors such as the garrets 150 and 250. People are paying £30 - £40 less for a secondhand garret than they would pay for a brand new one with a guarantee? That just does not make sense to me. I did a bit research on the bounty hunter range and there are mixed reviews from both amateurs and so called 'pros'. Build quality has been questioned and it has been likened to a toy. Well, yes it is plastic in construction and i was a bit apprehensive about this, but in actual fact i now consider that to be a bonus. I have been out 3 times since 7th feb and its lightness is a real bonus, you hardly need any effort to use this detector. I first tried it the day after i received it, and it was so simple and enjoyable, i couldnt believe it. After an hour of searching i had found £1.44 and a brass tap. Not enough to retire on but great fun. The next time i tried it i went a bit further than the playing field and into the woods, and i had read the manual so i was able to use the discrimination modes. I found 8 coins, a mixture of half pennies, 2 x 20p pieces 2 x £1 coins an old penny and what looks like a coin with queen victorias head on it ( though this is pretty well worn) oh and an old dinky toy tractor which is in excellent condition. The third trip out was purely to test depth on various metals and to learn the different tones that it makes in the three different modes offered. I have no magical method to offer as these tests are very basic but i am learning to trust the detector and the tones it emits in certain modes. Its not a magic wand and its not 100% accurate. Whether thats down to me or what i dont know, but i feel fairly confident that i am learning and that the detector seems reliable. I shall hopefully be going to the beach fairly soon to test its capabilities and pitch it against my 2 mates, as yet unused , garret detectors. And thats the thing, its no good paying big money for a detector if youre not going to go out and use it regularly. These two mates of mine have had theirs since christmas but havent even used them in the garden yet !!!!! I would say this is a very good introduction to the hobby and that if you are prepared to read your manual and learn how to use the 2 controls and flick switch, then this will be an excellent choice for most people. People with expensive detectors will always 'knock' cheaper detectors, they have to justify spending their money dont they? UPDATE###### Just a quick update, my tally of coins now totals approx. 70-80. Ive been out about 7 times. The coins are king george pennies and halfpennies, queen victoria farthings,threepenny pieces, two shilling coins,queen elizabeth pennies (pre decimalisation) and loads of modern pennies,10p pieces,20p pieces, 50p and pound coins. Im mainly using 'disc' mode as i have been in high trash areas. Last week i found a queen victoria commemorative medal which i think is my best find to date. I am more than happy with the detector, the only thing i have slight doubts about is the depth at which it is detecting. All my finds have been fairly shallow, about 4 inches, so when i find less trashy areas im going to use 'all metal mode' as this apparently gives more depth !
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