A U-shaped core (or yoke), of iron laminations or ferrite, carries two windings (see figure 2a). As in induction balance machines, the coupling (mutual inductance) of the two windings is measured, using a "bridge" circuit to monitor changes. The physical quantity being inferred is the "reluctance" of the magnetic path, which is determined predominantly by the magnetic properties of the core, and only affected to a lesser extent by the presence of nearby magnetic steel. Since the magnetic properties of the core are inevitably temperature-sensitive (and even affected by other magnetic fields, including the Earth's), zero-drift is as much of a problem as in any other "balanced" technique.
The Pulse-Induction technique (see figure 2b) does not use any magnetic core inside the search head, and so is completely immune from these effects.
Since a Pulse-Induction coil can (in principle) be any shape required, the "shape" and extent of the field can be optimised for both bar-resolution and bar-orientation, with total zero-point stability (figure 3d).
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