Field Engineering · Updated April 2026

Garrett Gold Master 24K — The Complete Africa Setup & Buyer's Guide

By Garrett Africa Field Engineering · 10 min read · Verified against the official Garrett Goldmaster 24K user manual

The Garrett Gold Master 24K (also called the Goldmaster 24K or GM 24K) is Garrett's flagship 48 kHz VLF gold detector — engineered specifically for fine alluvial gold in mineralised ground. For Kenya's western goldfields (Vihiga, Kakamega, Narok, Kisumu) and Tanzania's shallow placer zones, the GM 24K is the most cost-effective serious-detector decision a prospector can make.

Official Garrett Goldmaster 24K Manual (EN, PDF) Direct download · Authoritative reference for every setting
What's in this guide
  1. What the GM 24K actually is
  2. Why 48 kHz matters
  3. First-time setup (10 minutes)
  4. XGB ground balance explained
  5. Iron Audio — the killer feature
  6. Best settings for Kenya
  7. Best settings for Tanzania
  8. GM 24K vs Garrett Axiom
  9. Price & warranty
  10. FAQ

What the GM 24K actually is

The Goldmaster 24K is a Very Low Frequency (VLF) gold detector running at a fixed 48 kHz transmit frequency. Its lineage is the legendary White's Goldmaster series — Garrett acquired the IP in 2020 after White's exited the market. The 24K rev under Garrett retains the original target-on-gold reputation while adding XGB Extended Ground Balance and Iron Audio.

Form factor: 1.36 kg, S-rod stem, hipmount option, 6×10" DD waterproof coil standard. Powered by 8× AA — about 30 hours field life on alkaline, 25 hours on rechargeable NiMH.

Why 48 kHz matters for African gold

Detection sensitivity to small gold scales with frequency. A 13 kHz general-purpose detector can find pieces from about 0.5g and up. A 48 kHz machine like the GM 24K reliably picks up sub-0.2g flakes — exactly what dominates Kenyan and Tanzanian alluvial deposits. Below the 0.2g threshold, prospectors leave gold in the ground without ever knowing it was there.

The trade-off: higher frequencies penetrate less and react more strongly to ground mineralisation. That's why the GM 24K runs Garrett's XGB auto-tracking ground balance — to hold stability at 48 kHz even on iron-rich clay.

First-time setup — 10 minutes

  1. Batteries. 8× AA. NiMH rechargeable preferred. Africa package includes 8 NiMH + charger.
  2. Mount the coil. 6×10" DD waterproof. Hand-tighten the wing nut. Route the cable along the stem.
  3. Power on. Press POWER. Display reads "24K".
  4. Pick a mode. PROSPECTING (raw audio, recommended for Africa) or DISCRIMINATION (target-ID). Most prospectors run PROSPECTING with Iron Audio ON.
  5. XGB ground balance. Press XGB, pump the coil to the ground 4–6 times. Detector then auto-tracks while you sweep.
  6. Iron Audio ON. Iron targets become a distinct low growl. Gold stays a clean high tone.
  7. Sensitivity 7/12. Default. Drop to 5/12 in heavy iron clay (Vihiga ridges).
  8. Threshold. Set just barely audible — you want to hear the absence of signal as much as the presence.

XGB ground balance — what it actually does

Old VLF detectors required you to manually re-ground-balance every 30–50 metres because the soil signature changes as you walk. Get behind on re-balancing and you start missing targets — they disappear into the ground noise.

XGB (Extended Ground Balance) auto-tracks. Once you do the initial pump-balance, the GM 24K continuously adjusts in real time. Practically: you spend less time fiddling and more time finding gold. On Kenyan iron-clay, this single feature is worth the price of the detector.

One caveat: XGB tracks slowly to avoid balancing out small targets. If you cross a soil boundary (say from clay to sandy creek bed) you'll get a few seconds of unstable audio while it re-tracks. Lift the coil briefly and let it settle.

Iron Audio — the feature most people don't use enough

Iron Audio gives ferrous targets (nails, wire, bottle caps) a low growl audio. Non-ferrous targets (gold, copper, lead) keep the clean high tone. Result: in trashy ground (old colonial-era farms, abandoned settlements), you stop digging worthless iron.

Tip: leave Iron Audio ON 100% of the time when prospecting in Kenya. The country has a century of iron rubbish across most of the western goldfields. In clean creek beds you can switch it off for marginal sensitivity gain.

Best settings for Kenya 🇰🇪

Best settings for Tanzania 🇹🇿

GM 24K vs Garrett Axiom — pick the right tool

JobBest detector
Sub-gram fine flake in Kenyan creek bedsGM 24K (48 kHz VLF)
Multi-gram nuggets in Tanzanian Lake Victoria placersGM 24K with optional 9×12" DD coil
Deep lode targets in Zambian Copperbelt mineralisationGarrett Axiom (Pulse Induction)
Heavy mineralisation that destroys VLF audioGarrett Axiom or Axiom Lite
Beach / saltwater workGarrett Axiom in SALT mode
One detector for diverse African terrainBoth — GM 24K + Axiom Lite combo

Price & warranty in Africa

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FAQ

Is the Garrett Goldmaster 24K the same as the White's Goldmaster?

The 24K is a refinement of the White's Goldmaster GMT lineage, now manufactured by Garrett. It retains the proven audio and detection characteristics while adding XGB and Iron Audio. Garrett owns the IP since White's closed in 2020.

Can the GM 24K find a 1g nugget at 30 cm?

In moderately mineralised ground, yes — comfortably. In heavily mineralised Zambian Copperbelt soil, that depth drops considerably; switch to the Axiom for that ground type.

Does the GM 24K work for coin and relic hunting?

It works but it's not optimised for it. The 48 kHz tunes for tiny gold and rejects medium-conductivity targets less efficiently than a 13 kHz general detector. Use the AT Pro or Apex for relic work.