T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
88.1 | Good choice! | MIGHTY::DILSWORTH | Keith Dilsworth DTN 264-5245 | Thu Mar 20 1986 11:51 | 17 |
| I watched a guy trying to use a Z6000P on the ice a few weeks ago.
He tried to use it through a hole, which didn't work. The unit did
look impressive though.
The Eagle Z6000 looks like a good bet for trout/salmon fishermen.
It has a deeper capability than the Hummingbird 2000 & 4000. It
also has more display segments, which should give you better
separation.
If someone out their would like to buy my Hummingbird Silent 60
Birdtrap portable I'll buy an Eagle.
As for ordering one, Zylas in Merrimack has the Z6000P in stock, for
$259.
Keith
|
88.2 | On the Hole, I rather...... | FELIX::SCHOLZ | Ron....and thanks for all the fish | Thu Mar 20 1986 12:04 | 22 |
| Well, here I go again............I have the Hummingbird 2000 and
use it all the time. I think that the LCR is one of the best things
to come down the pike since the invention of the depth finder. It
is easy to use and gives you a fairly good look at what is down
there. The picture is not quite as "clear" as a chart recorder,
but much better than a flasher, where you can miss things to easy.
The new models promiss even better resolution, if I can believe
the ads and pictures they are showing. Price is not "real" bad either.
Good investment Ed........The low current drain lets you run it
all day and the alarm feature can tip you off to things you might
have missed by being to busy fishing (or driving).
I mounted mine on the console where it can be swung around and be
seen from the front seat or from the drivers seat. One little thing
I find that doesn't work to well is the night light.
The only think that I think of to warn new buyers about, is mounting
the transducer. There is quite a write up on making sure it is done
right, because if not it will not work right (false echos and such).
Tight lines and enjoy, Ron (will_spring_ever_come?)
|
88.3 | Below the Hole, holeshot? | BIGALO::BLUM_ED | | Thu Mar 20 1986 14:18 | 20 |
|
One of the guys I know who has a Z6000 also tryed to run it for
ice fishing, the key, from what I gather, is to mount your transducer
on a stick and to get it completely below the ice, not just aim
it down the hole. If your hanging it in the hole you get all sorts
of weird sh_t from reflections off the sides of the hole, mucho
clutter, etc. Once he got it down on the stick it apparently worked
good, shoing 1.5" to 2" bait hanging at 20 ft...thats good resolution.
Cabela's has Z6000P on sale right now (spring catalogue) for $249.99,
I heard a rumoor Gander Mountain beats this price by about ten bucks
but who's to quibble.
I intend to use mine for trout and salmon from a 16 FT canoe, rigging
some sort of sidemount which can be raised in the shallow and when
scraping rocks is my plan........more input to this note appreciated!
Specially form any similar users.........Ed
|
88.4 | transducer mounting | ASGMKB::TOMAS | Joe | Thu Mar 20 1986 16:23 | 28 |
| I presently own a Lowrance portable flasher (up for sale) and am
intending to buy the Eagle 6000 for my 14' canoe. Instead of buying
the portable unit which takes up too much floor space, I'm planning
on mounting it on the thwart and on a swivel mount so that either
I or my fishing partner can see it.
I've given some thought to mounting the transducer on my elec. trolling
motor (as recommended by many manufacturers), but I personally don't
care for that idea as it exposes the transducer to the first rock
you hit (see diagram below). Instead, I'm going to continue using the
suction cup mount as it works just fine and can be mounted anywhere on
the hull.
| |
| |
| |
| |
----- --- /\
| \_\/
|__________/ /\
|_| \ \ \/
^ \__\
exposed transducer -------| ^
|----- keel or skeg
-Joe-
|
88.5 | Beware of suction cup mounting. | NERMAL::FRASHER | | Thu Mar 20 1986 17:27 | 8 |
| Many years ago, I used a depth finder for salmon fishing. The
transducer mounted on the hull with a suction cup. The only real
problem I had with it was that I would forget that it was down there
and take off at 60MPH. It would come loose and slap violently on
the side of the boat. I think I broke it, eventually. Just for
info, if you have a fast boat, keep it in mind.
Spence
|
88.6 | a fast canoe... | ASGMKB::TOMAS | Joe | Thu Mar 20 1986 17:39 | 2 |
| Until I mount a 50hp Merc on my canoe, I don't think it will be
a problem....
|
88.7 | ME TO | COMET2::HUNTER | JACK | Thu Mar 20 1986 21:17 | 6 |
| Samething happened to me last year except the coaxial cable
got into the prop and boy what a mess that was.
Heed The Warning
Jack
|
88.8 | Z6000 Best Buy | SYSENG::NELSON | | Fri Mar 21 1986 13:10 | 57 |
| If I were to buy a LCR or LCG right now, my choice would be the
Eagle Z6000. For the price and the features you can't go wrong,
and I agree with Ron about these being the best thing since the
depth finder. Who wants to mess with rolls of expensive graph
chart recorder paper? The one advantage of these is a permanent
record of a location or a bottom contour, and that's not too important
for me since I remember where I catch or don't catch any fish.
I have a Humminbird 4000 which I acquired before the Lowrance put
out theirs. I knew it was coming out with more features and to
compete with Humminbirds, but I couldn't wait. That's the way the
new technology goes. Since then, Humminbird has upgraded theirs
and also came out with a new one. Anyway, I chose mine for trolling
in moderately deep water (< 120') on inland ponds and lakes and
am quite satisfied with it's performance. The Z6000 with 2600 pixels
should have better screen definition then the LCR4000 which has
1800. The features such as fish alarm and bottom alarm will let
you concentrate more on fishing than on watching the screen. The
Z6000 has a 20 degree transducer which is fine for most fishing.
The Humminbird has a 16 degree transducer which is more to my liking
for deeper water. This is the angle of the cone shot from the "eye".
The shallower the water the wider the angle you want to see more
around you. If in deep water, you want to see what's under you
and not something that might be in a 50' radius in any direction
around you. A protractor and some graph paper can give you a reference
of the area your looking at for any particular depth.
As for some suggestions, read the owner's manual thoroughly. Where
ever you mount the transducer make sure it's away from any turbulence.
It will not work properly shooting through air bubbles, also a small
change in the tilt and depth of the transducer can make large
improvements. I have mine mounted on a trolling motor with the
cable tied to the shaft at appropriate spots and have no complaints.
If I'm in real shallow water I have the trolling motor raised out
of danger. The "eye" must be kept clean from oil, dirt, etc. to
operate properly. A mild liquid detergent is fine if it really
gets that dirty. Also, if out of the water for an extended amount
of time, the "eye" may be reluctant to becoming thoroughly "wetted".
Rubbing with your fingers in the water will help remove any surface
trapped air bubbles or film.
Having manual sensitivity control allows more information to be
detected such as a hard rock bottom or a soft muddy one. Don't
be fooled by a double echo of the bottom if the sensitivity is too
high, but increasing the sensitivity can pick up more in the water
to the point of schools of very small bait fish or suspended matter.
I think I have been able to detect the thermocline even but won't
be able to confirm this till I get my temperature probe. When I'm
just cruising along or lazy, I'll have the sensitivity on AUTO.
I'll start a new response on some of the new products and features
that I think are interesting.
Good luck and good fishing...
Steve
|
88.9 | sonar on ice | COMET::HUNTER | JACK | Fri Mar 21 1986 21:38 | 20 |
| Here is a tip for using fish finder durring ice fishing season,
As was said in an earlier note, if you use a fish finder for ice
fishing there is always the problem of false echos and such. in
one of the replys it was suggested that you tie the transducer to
a stick and lower it into the water this will work but I have found
a way to check for fish before you drill your hole. I was talking
with my dad and he told me that he and his buddys did this for years
with great success, by now you are saying get to the point Jack
so I will. next time you go ice fishing bring along a small amount
of water, wet the transducer and the ice next place the transducer
on the wetted spot on the ice it will soon freeze to the ice thus
the transducer will treat the ice as water alowwing you to see what
is down there before you take the time to drill your hole. I have
never tried this personnally but if you can't trust your own dad
who can you trust, why don't some of you guys that still have ice
on try this and let me know if I really can trust my him.
Jack Waiting_to_here_from_you_on_this_one!!
|
88.10 | more on sonar thru ice | ASGMKB::TOMAS | Joe | Mon Mar 24 1986 10:50 | 14 |
| Jack,
I've tried what you suggested....putting water on top of the ice
and placing the transducer in the water. It still never worked.
From what I can gather, if the ice is white in color, it means that
there is a lot of air in the ice and the signal from the transducer
can't penetrate. The best condition for scanning thru the ice is
when you have "black ice," i.e. no air in the ice. I've seen pictures
of this before but have never personally seen it. Apparently it
is quite rare and I don't know what causes this condition. Anyone
care to elaborate on what causes "black ice"?
-Joe-
|
88.11 | New and EXPENSIVE! | SYSENG::NELSON | | Mon Mar 24 1986 15:43 | 48 |
| When prices are this high, I like to look and wait till they drop
which they usually do. Looking at Humminbird's new LCR 8000, we
should be seeing some strides in performance, functionality, and
practicality in the way of sonar. This has it all to date. A new
6"x4" viewing screen with 16 half-screen memory should satisfy just
about anyone. A big difference that goes along with this is the
split screen operation. This is like having two in one. One to
look at the big picture (full depth) and another to be kept in ZOOM
to monitor in detail the bottom for structure or a particular depth
range in search of suspended fish. It has all the other alarms
and digital depth readout and also an optional surface temperature
input. Now we're getting somewhere. When the other manufacturers
come out with theirs we'll have a regular hi-tech sonar wars going
on. All the while the prices will surely drop. I'd rather have
one piece of gear that can do it all then to have to be concerned
with several at once.
Now the one that has really caught my eye and I believe is going
to change people's way of looking at things is the Micronar M-810
Side-Scanning LCD from Si-Tex. This truly seems to be the correct
method of using sonar to me. Previously, a 3 dimentional cone is
shot below, compressed and displayed as a 2 dimentional vertical
line. As this scrolls to the left, the majority of the screen
just becomes history. There is no way of telling what you see is
directly below you or to the right or left. It's sort of a flat
picture of what you pass over parallel to the boats direction of
travel. With this side scanning technique, you have a very narrow
beam being scanned side to side an displaying a 2 dimentional picture
perpendicular to the boats travel. This accurately shows you what
is under and to the sides of you at all times. As the boat moves
forward the 3rd dimention comes into play by the screen constantly
updating and giving the impression of the data scrolling to the
viewer. The history is in the viewer's mind to speak of sort of.
If I were trolling a pond that had a old river channel on the bottom,
I could stay right on top of that channel at all times. When the
channel moves left I would steer left. If there was a drop off
next to the shore I was fishing along. It would be no problem to
keep right next to it at all times. You cannot do this with the
other method without a lot of manuevering and some quesswork. With
the side scanning, if you are stationary what you see is what is
there at the moment. With the other, if there was a fish stationary
below you it would display as a line scrolling right across the
screen. This would happen even if you were moving and the fish
was moving along with you. I've seen this happen and at first I
thought either there are some long eels around or a new world record.
Anyone have any thoughts on this?
Steve
|
88.12 | "Scanning for dollars" | RANGLY::BLUM_ED | | Mon Mar 24 1986 16:12 | 27 |
|
Technology marches on, the LCR 8000 IS a super machine, at the present
the price is also "super"...in a year or so it will come down a
bit but it'll be a while before we see major decreases on the upper
end of the scale....on the lower end...there are several LCD units
pirced at $150 or less....admitted they do not have the massive
bells and whistles of the top line units..but for the low end user
who is not demanding stringent performance they would do the job.
The side scanner is likely the best innovation yet if it works as
advertised......however for the present the cost of it and the 8000
remains more than I could swing under the "just some more fishin
stuff, honey" line of reasoning. Also, there's the question of
portability. I beleive that for side scanning to be effective one
would need a permanent thru the hull mount to preserve accuracy..
Because of the amount of POWER needed to pull off side scan techniques
I rather doubt that a portable unit will be along in the near future.
Like everthing else one must make tradeoffs.
Tight Lines
Ed
|
88.13 | Side to Side and Belly to Belly.. | FELIX::SCHOLZ | Ron....and thanks for all the fish | Mon Mar 24 1986 16:35 | 13 |
| Side scan is great, but present one problem that I haven't seen
the answer for yet (anyone else?). All the ones I'm familar with
rely on the "probe" being at some depth and not just on the surface.
The one they used to find the Titanic was pulled along at 1000'+.
Seems to me that to be affective the probe would have to be
submerisible to various depths. (????)
The idea of being down with the fish and looking across the water
for them and struture would be neat. I just don't know how you do
it from the bottom of a boat.
Tight lines, Ron
|
88.14 | Scan Scam | RANGLY::BLUM_ED | | Tue Mar 25 1986 10:03 | 15 |
|
Side scanning sonar as used for the titanic search is a considerable
different type of beast than what we are talking here...it uses
highly sophisticated "windows" which project the sonar "beams" out
to the sides at considerable power....thus needed to be towed deep.
I beleive the Micronar must either a multiple transducer array or
some means of electrically rotating the transducer axis to do the
side scanning...also a lot of it is not in how you scan but how
process the timing data coming back from the receiver. Must use
a lot of mirrors?:^)
|
88.15 | Siding it up...... | FELIX::SCHOLZ | Ron....and thanks for all the fish | Tue Mar 25 1986 12:27 | 10 |
| Thanks Ed,
I figured it had to something like that. The processing must be
a ball. Multiple angle data and making sense out of it.......ugh!
If anyone happens to see one in action, I'd be interested in the
results. I somehow like the idea of being able to look more toward
where I'm going to cast.
Tight lines, Ron
|
88.16 | Contact...torpedos loose! | ASGMKB::TOMAS | Joe | Tue Mar 25 1986 13:05 | 9 |
| Side scanning seems great, but I question its relative merits when
the majority of bass fishing is done is waters less than 15'. I'm
sure that the unit doesn't reach out that far in shallow waters. Second,
does the unit actually tell you the distance to the side relative
to your position and the actual water depth? If not and it only
indicates the direction, how does one know how far out to cast and
how deep to go??
-Joe-
|
88.17 | A Sideways Glance | SYSENG::NELSON | | Tue Mar 25 1986 16:03 | 35 |
| I don't claim to have all the answers for this piece of gear, but
in reply to Joe's question in -.1 there appears to be a lot of merit
to this. A few more of the features that I've read are selectable
ranges of the scan. The choice of 30, 45, or 60 degrees to the
right, the left, or directly under the boat. Under normal operation,
it scans 45 degrees to the left and to the right. That is a 90
degree angle of view! Now I'm more interested in deeper water;
however, it really doesn't matter. In 15' of water scanning 45
degrees to the left and to the right, we're talking covering 15'
out to the left and 15' out to the right.
|-> /|\ <--45 degrees right and left
| / | \
| / | \
15' / | \
| / 90 |90 \
|-> /45_______|______45 \
^ ^
|__15'____|
I hope this kind of shows what I mean. Now you can never cover
this ground with a 16 or 20 degree type cone. With those in 15'
of water we're looking at maybe a 5' circle on the bottom and less
the shallower you go. The other important feature is the cursor
which can be moved vertically and horizontally anyway on the screen
like to a fish. The read out tells you the depth, distance and
direction. This could be done after freezing the display to prevent
losing your target if moving. As Ed has said, I certainly expect
the scanning is electronic within the transducer. It comes with
a gimbal mount to be easily installed on a trolling motor. I'm
am going to try and get the rundown from the manufacturer and post
what I find.
Steve
|
88.18 | Z power | RANGLY::BLUM_ED | | Thu Apr 17 1986 11:29 | 24 |
| AHHHH...I have received and tested by Z6000-P......what fun....these
things are the answer if one needs to know the bottom contour of
a pond or lake......VERY effective......all I have used is the auto
matic functions as there are a lot of buttons and I like to fish
and not fiddle this time of year......it will track no problem into
water as shallow as three or four feet before losing bottom lock...
for what its worth as our ponds and lakes are clear enuf to see
bottom as those depths no problem. In water less than ten feet deep
it does take a few seconds to find bottom, but once locked on it
tracks quite well...I am completely satified with this unit....
No help from the finder but as a "aside" I did get out fishing recently
and "exercised" a "few" brook trout......fifty two in fact....ranging
from 8 to about 13 inches.....ouch ...my arm hurts....can type
any longer...
Tight Lines
Ed
|
88.19 | 1987 LCR/LCD procuct info | BOVES::GATULIS | | Fri Oct 31 1986 00:44 | 59 |
|
Info on LCR's and LCD's for '87'
Humminbird has a new unit called the LCR4-ID.
This displays fish (hmmm! targets, in red). That's right, 2 color!
They've up'd the vertical pixel count from 60 to 75 which means
better resolution and separation. They say 1.25" resolution
when zooming.
Sounds like it haz variable zoom windows.
Doesn't seem to have memory and doesn't have split screen
Depth scale is displayed along the edge of the LCR readout
Displays temperature if you have the optional probe kit
definitely worth looking at. The rest of the lins is about the
same. These birds seem to have nice user features but they've
not done a great deal to improve the electronics performance
this year.
EAGLE has the new Z7000
It's in the Pro shop catalogue fro about $450
Big change is the have 192 vertical pixels and grey scale. The graphics
look nice and has 1.5" resolution.
Very high power (312 watts rms) going and goes down to about 1000'
has 9 deph ranges
has 8 zoom window sizeswhich can be positioned in 1' increments
with the speed sensor option (at about $30) you get
temperature from 0.0 to 99.9 degrees.
digital speedometer
trip log (miles traveled)
Grayline for hard/soft bottom determination
has on-line menus for "more advanced" features
Does not have memory
Has full automatic mode with bottom lock
manual mode looks like a straight forward user interface
LOWRANCE has the X-5 as its top of the line
This unit has everything the Z-7000 has plus more ...
Has memory for saving screens (doesn't say how many)
Display temp in F or C
Display depth in Ft, Fa, Meters
total variable depth ranges (you give upper/lower)
total variable zoom (you specify window, min window is 10')
Keypad entry for data. Kepad set up like a calculator with the 2nd
function button. Gives you more control than the Z-7000 but
is a little more difficult to learn to operate.
The unit will sell for around $450 but that does not include a
transducer. To give more functionalitat about the same price
they take away the transducer. A transducer for these is about
$25 if you shop. The speed sensor is also an additional $30.
The other lowarance/eagle products are the
Z6100, Z5000 eagles and the lowrance X4 which all have 82 vertical
pixcels and 50-75 watts of power. They are in the $200-$300 range
and functionality varies with price.
One question !! With all the bells an whistles in these things,
how come nobodys units have a clock?
|
88.20 | Let's here it for the LCR's... | CANDY::MERCURIO | | Fri Oct 31 1986 15:20 | 22 |
| Thanks for the info. I already have the Z6000 and think it's great!
I use it up front next to my electric trolling motor. Back at my
console I have a Lowrance Flasher unit for navigational purposes.
I've been reluctant to buy a gragh (like other "well rigged" boats)
because I'm not interested in keeping paper, so I've been waiting
for a "gragh like" LCR to come along. Well from what you've said
and what I've read the X5 is the answer.
Having a LCR already I find that the best thing about it is that
I can keep it on allllll the time.... I think, no I'm sure, it's
improved my fishin. I can see and interpret things much more accurately
and can see FISH!!!!!!! I normally don't use it in the automatic
mode but add more sensitivity and keep it off "auto ranging". This
allows me to see more fish and to have the widest gap displayed
between the surface and bottom. Oh, by the way, I usually put
2 or 3 feet for my upper limit to eliminate the junk at the top
of the screen.
anybody interested in buying a good flasher??
0-30' and 0-60' scales, 400 watts
Jim
|
88.21 | Waiting for Christmas | BOVES::GATULIS | | Fri Oct 31 1986 18:57 | 9 |
| I also have a lowrance flasher a model 2330 tri-range and for a
flasher I can't think of any 'd rather have. I'm goint to upgrade
to an X5 or Z7000 because flashers have 2 inherrent problems
a) if your not looking you don't see and id rather fish
b) they don't work well trying to find fish on the bottom (at
least I've not had much success).
I'm really looking forward to the new units because they seem almost
as powerful chart recorders.
|
88.22 | Compatability Issue | TORCH::MACINTYRE | Life's great, then u live forever. | Tue Nov 11 1986 14:46 | 14 |
| Anyone know if the transducer connections on an Eagle flasher and an
Eagle LCR are the same? How about the connections for a Hummingbird
flasher and an Eagle LCR? Why do I ask, you might ask?
I've decided that I'm gonna pick up a flasher sometime over the
winter. Yes, I'd much rather get an LCR but at 3 times the cost, it'll
have to wait. Anyway, my partner has an Eagle Z6000 on his (non-bass)
boat thatI'd like to be able to use on mine. (last year the
trasnducer wasn't mounted permanently so we could swap it between
boats, next year he's gonna mount it right) So, I figure if I can get
a flasher with a compatible transducer, then I should be able to
unplug the flasher and plug in the LCR. Possible?
Don Mac
|
88.23 | Transducer Compatability | BOVES::GATULIS | | Tue Nov 11 1986 15:02 | 21 |
| All Eagle and Lowrance transducers are interchangeable between flashers
LCD's and charts. Even the connectors are identical with one exception,
some of the older model transducers use a phone jack which can be
replaced. In fact the're more than interchangeable, their identical
units with different part numbers and the Eagle transducers are
less expensive due to the Lowrance marketing strategy.
I've been trying to find out if a Humminbird transducer is
interchangeable for a long time. I've asked all the companies if
they were interchangeable and they all say no, but won't give a
reason. They all say the unit won't perform correctly. I'd
be willing to bet they are interchangeable but can't prove it.
It wouldn't surprse me if the'y were both made by the same vendor.
If your shopping you may be interrested to know that I have the
owners manual for the Eagle Z7000 and the Lowrance X5 and could
send you a copy. In my opinion these 2 units are in a class
by themselves.
Frank
|
88.24 | possibly this | SYSENG::NELSON | | Tue Nov 11 1986 15:40 | 14 |
| Re: .23
There are differences in the "cone angle" of the transducers made,
but more importantly there are different frequencies on which the
units operate on. This would account for some transducers not
correctly operating on other units of a different frequency. This
frequency determines how often the signal is sent and received by
the transducer. This specification is not always shown in the ad
but the manufacturer or manual will be able to tell you.
Steve_who's_been_busy_and trying_to_catch_up
p.s. Nice going Dave B. on your Atlantic Salmon catch (and release)!
Congratulations!
|
88.25 | sounds good | TORCH::MACINTYRE | Life's great, then u live forever. | Tue Nov 11 1986 15:44 | 5 |
| Thanks, that's what I wanted to hear!
Thanks anyway, but I don't think I need the LCR manuals.
Don Mac
|
88.26 | One Hummingbird Worked....... | TORA::SCHOLZ | Ron....and thanks for all the fish | Tue Nov 11 1986 17:44 | 9 |
| Don,
I interchanged my Humingbird flasher with my LCR and had no problems.
If you would like to talk "flasher" I may have one for you. Send
mail if interested............
Tight lines, Ron
|
88.27 | flasher for sale | RANGLY::VORHIS_AL | | Wed Nov 12 1986 11:25 | 6 |
| If interested , I have a Lowrance flasher (1 year old )that is for
sale at a right price . It is a model 2460B , operates at 192 KHZ,
will sell with or without the transducer . Have all of the books
etc. which came with it . 250 watt .
If interested send mail or call DTN 271-6975
|
88.28 | | EAYV01::TRAVERS | | Thu Nov 13 1986 14:38 | 7 |
|
RE; Aboot the last 5
Ye've loast masel here,..bit yese ken yer stuff!!
Trapper
|
88.29 | We've come a long way baby... | CANDY::MERCURIO | | Thu Dec 04 1986 17:14 | 21 |
| Hey Frank,
I read over the owner's manuals you sent me and I must say, very
impressive!! The X5 from Lowrance is head and shoulders ahead of
the competition. It looks like you made a good decision and I'll
probably follow in your footsteps when I order my X5. The only
thing I may do differently is get my unit locally. When I bought
my Z6000, I bought it from Northern Bass, formally in Exeter NH
now they have a whse. in Brentwood on Rt125. I had a problem with
it's functions and was able to get a replacement immediately. I
know the owner (Barry Hunt, former salesman at Driscoll's Marine
of Seabrook) and he's very easy to deal with. Their prices are
very competitive and if not there's always Zylas Auction in Merrimack.
In any case, I hopefully I won't have to deal with a catalog, their
either back ordered my stuff, sending me things I didn't order, or worse
yet the stuff doesn't WORK! (nothing like buying things off a shelf).
Thanks again for the info.
Jim
|
88.30 | spring fever | TORCH::MACINTYRE | Life's great, then u live forever. | Tue Feb 03 1987 13:40 | 20 |
| I recently picked up an lcr and could use some suggestions on installation.
Aha, you exepected questions on mounting the transducer, but alas, I'm talking
about the display unit. Since Ol' Stump Jumpa's driven from the transom, I'd
like to be able to move the display from here to here, without much trouble.
The boat is aluminum | | (what graphics!)
so I'm kinda concerned v v
about the vibrations ----------------------------
the unit would absorb motor | | | | | || troll. motor
if I attached it | | | | | ||
directly to the gunnel, ----------------------------
but the gunnel would be the the most convenient place for it. For those
unfortunate souls who did not partake in either of the DEC Bass'n tournaments,
SJ is a narrow 14ft john boat, that is trucktopped, not trailored. That means
the unit, along with motors, battery, seats, etc., will be installed and
removed each trip ( = pain in the a**). However the transducer and cable will
be permanent.
I've considered c clamps, velcro, magnets...
Any pros/cons/suggestions out there? Don Mac
|
88.31 | This could work... | CANDY::MERCURIO | | Tue Feb 03 1987 15:03 | 9 |
| DON,
I saw on one of Roland Martin's shows that he had his graph recorder
mounted on a carpeted piece of 2X10 which was very portable. The
wood is heavy enough to keep the unit from tipping and the carpet
shock absorbed the unit in heavy water. With long wires the unit
can be moved anywhere in the boat for easy viewing.
Jim
|
88.32 | why bother?? | AIMHI::TOMAS | Joe | Tue Feb 03 1987 15:59 | 11 |
| Geez, Don, I dunno? How's an LCR gonna tell you where the bottom
is? I mean, with all the stuff you carry in Stump Jumpa, adding
one more thing like the LCR is gonna make the LCR say bottom is
ZERO feet....'cause you're gonna be sitting on the bottom!
...then you'll have to turn the transducer around to see how far
UP the surface is! (maybe we'll have a first-hand report on how
water-proff they really are!)
-HoleShot-(wonderin_how_long_Don_can_tread_water!)
|
88.33 | | HPSCAD::BPUISHYS | Bob Puishys | Tue Feb 03 1987 19:22 | 10 |
| Buy a swivel mount and put it on the middle set. Then you can see
from the front and the back!!!
Might what to get two transducers. If the SJ does the same thing
the one I own, the sturn comes too far out of the water when I am
fishing by my self and standing in the front.
If you buy 2 put the other one on your trolling motor!
bb
|
88.34 | Mounting your lcr/flasher | HPSCAD::GATULIS | | Tue Feb 03 1987 19:29 | 8 |
|
I have a similar situation. I take my electronics in a small boat
and like to move it around. I attached my gimbal mount to a piec
of 4x4 that's about 9 inches long. The 4x4 has plenty of weight
so it never tips. I left the cables long enough to move it around
the floor or put it up on a seat. Works well for me!
Frank
|
88.35 | "What display? | BAXTA::BLUM_ED | | Tue Feb 03 1987 21:58 | 4 |
|
Take off your polaroids..it helps....E
|
88.36 | thanks | TORCH::MACINTYRE | Life's great, then u live forever. | Wed Feb 04 1987 18:35 | 17 |
| RE.31,34 Hmmm, sounds possible, although SJ's kinda narrow and I
don't much floor room.... But if it's good enough for Roland, I guess it should
be good enough for me!
RE.32 Poor Holeshot... He's still upset about his embarrassing moment at
the NH tourney. He had heard all the talk about LCR's, but showed up ith a
VCR instead of an LCR. Better get your hearing aid checked Joe...
Poor ol' guy...
RE.33 I considered mounting it on the seat Bob, but I have a pair of swivel
clamp-on seats that take up must of the room on each bench. Also, the
distance between the 2 seats is about 6', that's a little far. And yea, I've
thought about the dual transducers also, that's a definite future enhancement.
No comments on gunnel mounting?
Don Mac
|
88.37 | | ABACUS::MACINTYRE | Catfish are jump'n | Fri Apr 24 1987 14:17 | 16 |
| Going to mount the lcr on the new boat tomorrow. Couple questions:
The Hummingbird manual states to mount the transducer a bit below the bottom
of the boat(A) - I'm pretty sure that at the expo, Hugh Wilbur stated that
they should be mounted flush with the bottom (B)...???
A) T----- B) T______
On the new boat, there's a lip around the bottom of the transom(C). I'm probably
going to mount a wooden block to the transom and then mount the transducer
bracket onto that - knowing that I'll probably have to replace the wooden
block eventually (year or two).
|
C) lip -> _|_______ Comments or suggestions?
|
88.38 | Change for a nickel? | SYSENG::NELSON | E unibus plurum | Fri Apr 24 1987 15:18 | 21 |
|
Re:.37 Don Mac
If possible, mounting flush with the bottom is preferred. This would
create less chance of snagging weeds and hitting objects causing damage.
One reason to mount lower then the bottom is to avoid hull turbulence
and air bubbles rolling under the boat and across the face of the transducer.
Before permanently attaching, I would want to try it out flush with the
bottom and moving it horizontally along the back until I was sure of a
clean signal at all usable boat speeds. If there was any interference
then I would lower it till the interference was gone. This is time
consuming and easier said then done, but once completed there will be
less headaches.
Are you using some kind of kick-up mount or able to raise and lower the
transducer? If not, you have to be very careful when putting the boat
in the water and taking it out or beaching to prevent the transducer from
getting damaged.
Those are my thoughts.... Steve
|
88.39 | advice from a pro... | AIMHI::FLETCHER | why are we here, anyway? | Fri Apr 24 1987 15:21 | 11 |
| Not being much better about this than you Don, here's my 2 cents
worth...
Keith Dillsworth said that his transducer (portable,stuck on transom)
would get "blacked out" by bubbles when he was going any faster
than trolling speed but he did continue to get the bottom reading...
(right Keith?).
Well, Gander has this neato kickup transducer bracket that gets
the transducer below the "noise" (they say)...looks like it drops
the transducer about 3-4" below the hull...mounts on the transom.
I've ordered one hoping I can avoid the "noise".
Maybe you could set something up like that...
|
88.40 | Careful...... | MENSCH::SCHOLZ | Ron....and thanks for all the fish | Fri Apr 24 1987 15:29 | 11 |
| Don, Steve has got it right..........mount it flush if you can and
remember to keep it level...don't be fooled by the transom edge.
I've had two different types of mounts from Hummingbird. One is
mounted flush against the transom and the other slightly off the
transom. In either case it is important to keep it level and at
the right height. Your boat isn't going to be going 60mph, so it
is not as critical, but make sure that it is more than six inches from
the motor or you "might" pick up ignition noise. And fasten the
cable with tie downs or it might get caught on something.
Have fun...tight lines, Ron
|
88.41 | Air Bubbles | MELODY::NEAL | | Fri Apr 24 1987 16:04 | 10 |
| Don, If your boat is alum. with rivets you may have a problem mounting
the transducer flush with the hull, the rivets will cause air bubbles
when moving at a fairly good clip. If and when you do try to mount
it flush, You will have a small gap between the transducer and transom.
This gap must be filled with one of those silicone sealers so you
have a flat surface with no voids. Again this is because of the
air bubbles that would be created by the gap.
Rich
|
88.42 | | TOPCAT::MACINTYRE | Catfish are jump'n | Fri Apr 24 1987 17:23 | 16 |
| Hmmmm...
The bracket that I have is the kick-up type, and offset so the transducer may
exetend below the transom. In the manual there are 2 sets of installation
directions, alum and glass. My previous boat was alum also so I installed it
accordingly. I'm curious if they suggest mounting the unit flush with the
bottom on glass boats. My new transom has more rivets than my last boat,
they are all along the seam, about 1/4" apart. So, there will definitely be
alot of turbulence back there - this may be why they suggest mounting it below
on aluminum transoms. Makes sense, the idea is to have the miniimal amount of
turbulence/air passing by the transducer - on glass everything is nice and
smooth so you can keep it flush, sealing the gap and all. But with
the aluminum boats, there's no way of getting around all the mess that the
rivets will be sending back - so therefore you have to go lower....
If anyone else has a comment, let's hear it... Don Mac
|
88.43 | Maximizer | GUMDRP::NEAL | | Fri May 22 1987 10:26 | 6 |
| I am currently in the market for a new Trolling motor. I'v been
looking at a unit with a built in Maximizer. I have heard that
the Maximizer can fry the sending unit on LCR's And Chart Recorders.
Any truth to this???
Rich Neal
|
88.44 | Maximizer Part II | GUMDRP::NEAL | | Thu May 28 1987 18:05 | 9 |
| I called Lowrance and found out that there is some type of High
Frequency signal in Maximizers that can damage the LCR or Chart
Recorder. I then asked "what do you mean it can, will it or wont
it?" The person then said "some people have gotten around it by
using differant batteries". I then asked " Oh so if I use a differant
battery i'll be ok?" The person then said " Well no but that may
be better". Well that was enough for me, I figure that it must be
some type of taboo and no one knows for sure. I think I will just
play it safe and stay away from the Maximizer's. :-(
|
88.45 | | HPSCAD::BPUISHYS | Bob Puishys | Thu May 28 1987 18:23 | 11 |
| When I got my x-5 and x-16 from lowrance it came with a one page
letter. This letter contained a warning and some advice about using
the maxinizer. Damage to a unit becasue of the use of a maximizer
may invalidate you lowrance warrenty.
The distance from the randucer and trolling motor has something
to do with the eletronic field which will do the damage to the
lowrance unit.
Bob
|
88.46 | Interphase Fish Sonar | BARNUM::CYGAN | | Fri Aug 14 1987 13:05 | 23 |
|
For those of you who may have been interested in 'real fish SONAR';
I'm the owner of an INTERPHASE 2000 fish sonar unit, and have the
following to report:
Fishing assistance performance is excellent; with a 5x5" amber screen
which clearly shows a wide-scan image of the area directly behind
the boat. Fish/debris are clearly distinguishable, and bottom contours
are very easily observed.
The unit draws 500 watts, has multiple alarms, ranges, etc., and
cost me $350 at Zyla's in Merrimack N.H.
All in all, it's an excellent unit with only one major HACK.....it's
screen brightness is so low you need to use a screen darkening 'tube'
array (I fabbed one from cardboard) in direct sunlight.
I'd say it's a ton better than most <$500.00 LCD units I've seen!
Bye the way....just cause you can SEE em, don't mean they'll bite
any better for you (old indian saying?) but we keep
trying don't we?
|
88.47 | HOW MUCH INPUT POWER? | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Fri Dec 18 1987 21:00 | 30 |
| Well, since the Christmas weather is here, I guess it's
time to start thinking about goodies for the new belly-boat.
In line with this thinking, here goes.
My first question has to do with current draw from a 12
volt battery. If a unit has a peak power of 50 watts,
what is the current draw from the 12 volt source? (If you
haven't figured it out yet, I am looking for a way to put an
lcd unit on my belly-boat and am trying to figure out what
type of battery I could use.) If this information is not
given in someone's owners manual, just give me some idea
of the size of fuse used in the power line. This will give
me enough info to figure out the average power consumption.
(I am thinking about using a rechargeable gel-cell type
motorcycle battery. I don't mind fishing an area if I
know there are fish there. What really bothers me is fishing
all day and not knowing whether any fish are even within
5 miles of where I'm fishing.
What size electric trolling motor would anyone recommend
for a 4 man rubber raft? When I go with both boys, it is
sometimes a pain because I tow the younger boy in a 2 man
(number of passengers you can get into a raft is question-
able) raft. If I could put the trolling motor on the 4 man
raft, I would fish in it with him and tow my older boy in his
belly-boat.
Oh, well, so much for the ramblings. Back to that dirty
four letter word "WORK"!
|
88.48 | "Tubers sonar" | MTBLUE::BLUM_ED | | Tue Dec 22 1987 12:10 | 34 |
|
Good luck, its not hard to rig up!!!
Dont know about the battery draw, One could just use a couple lantern
batteries, as most portables do, or go fancy with a rechargable
(Motorcycle battery) Hummmm. I called the manufacturer (Lowrance) on
my unit and THEY couldnt tell me what the current draw would be...you
might want to try this avenue with your unit...good luck..:^).
I messed around with mounting my Z6000-P on my tube (Caddis delux) last
year, but never really used it for fishing. I mounted the transducer
on the lower rear of the tube by means of some D rings I had the local
shoe repair person install. I put two strapped 6 volt lantern batteries in
the back pocket with jury rigged wiring to the panel which I mounted on
the right side pocket where I had more D rings placed (Yes, my tube is
covered with D rings, handy things they are). This rig was secretly float
tested early one morning at a obscure dam in the belgrade lakes chain.
There seemed to be WAY too much wiring hanging around, transducer cables
and so forth which would need to be shortened, and I would suggest getting
matching connectors to use for the wiring which should be waterproofed etc,
as well as routing all wiring permanently inside the bag, but basically
the concept of the thing worked. Accurate readings were only possible
when drifting, when "under power" the pushers generated a lot of hash
as the propulion system and resultant swirls are within the cone of the
transducer. This may work better if force fins are used as the transducer
would be "Leading" rather than "following" the swirls generated by the fins.
Because my less than secure/watertight connections developed some
problems and the season was winding down I didnt pursue it any further and
the system was never fully implemented.....:^>.....next season?????
Tight Lines
Ed
|
88.49 | Interphase Questions | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Fri Feb 12 1988 19:35 | 10 |
| I'm looking at an Interphase 20/20. Is that what you meant by a
"2000"? If so, how deep do you use it? I generally fish Lake Ontario
or the finger lakes of New York and need 300ft. How does it work
at those depths? The price locally is $375.00 (+7% tax) The single
unit gives depth, surface temp and trolling speed. I now have
agraph/flasher combo unit that I'd like to replace. It always runs
out of paper in rough water. (Then a car never runs out of gas when
its parked!)
Don
|
88.50 | What about CRT's? | FROST::WALZ | Gary Walz | Tue Feb 16 1988 17:35 | 13 |
|
Any inputs/comments on some of the new CRT jobs out? I've been
looking around for a new LCD, and have seen ads for several
comparably priced CRT versions. Unfortunately, I haven't seen
one actually operating, and haven't found much literature on
them.
Eagle makes one, the VG-200, which sells discounted around $250.
It would appear resolution is better than LCD's in this price range.
Anybody have any experience with them?
-gary
|
88.51 | CRT's are hard to see | FEISTY::TOMAS | Joe | Tue Feb 16 1988 18:17 | 13 |
|
Just a quick comment on the new CRT units...
I saw the Interphase models for the first time last year and was really
impressed with the resolution of the display. However, like a regular TV,
when sunlight shines on the screen, it becomes extremely difficult ot view.
An LCR, on the otherhand, becomes EASIER to see when bright light shines on
it. If most of your fishing is done at night, then the CRT has the advantage
over a backlit LCR, but given that most fishing is done in daylight, you may
find the CRT models a little hard to see, even with the sun shade installed.
-Joe- (still lookin to upgrade my old Lowrance flasher)
|
88.52 | my opinion..... | SKIVT::BATES | Salmo Salar | Tue Feb 16 1988 18:33 | 6 |
|
Paper or LCG is the only way to go!!!!!!
rb
|
88.53 | Another opinion | MTBLUE::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Wed Feb 17 1988 11:19 | 23 |
| The CRT models certainly offer a lot, especially the color ones.
You can get a lot of information on a CRT that is difficult to show
with an LCD display. Some of the drawbacks I believe are greater
power consumption and less ability to withstand abuse. I don't have
any specs in front of me but I imagine that a CRT model could drain
a battery fairly quickly, even the LGG'S have a healthy power
appetite. This may not be a problem if you are equipped with dual
batteries or are willing to start the motor periodically. I use
duals and switch over to one battery when I am stationary and using
my electronics. This preserves one battery for starting even if
the other gets run down.
It may just be my perception but I think that the vacuum tube
(valve for our British noters) and wiring of the CRT units render
them more succeptable to damage while being trailered or pounding
around in the water. Of course if you are talking mostly lake travel
this wouldn't be much of a problem either.
All in all I think that if your boat and type of fishing are
compatible with it, a CRT unit should prove to be very satisfactory.
I have an LCG but I would certainly consider a CRT if I was in the
market for a new one. I hope we hear from more people with actual
experiences with these units.
Paul Who_is_knee_deep_in_snow_and_already_tired_of_ice_fishing
|
88.54 | My two cents on Color machines | TOOK::SWEET | | Wed Feb 17 1988 11:45 | 12 |
|
The eagle unit is a buyout of another company. Lowrance does not
currently build its crt units. I saw the high end eagle color machine
in Worcester and it looked good. However...if I had my choice I
would stick with a high end paper machine, I still find them the
easyest to read. The major advantage to some crt units is they have
surf temp and digital water depth for when you are cruising. The
glare problem is a real problem from what I have heard, plan on
having a hood, if you can mount it in cabin this is the best since
it will keep it out of the elements and reduce the glare.
Bruce
|
88.55 | Hidden feature? | CIMNET::CREASER | SUPER STRING | Wed Feb 17 1988 13:31 | 20 |
| I am somewhat surprized that a very useful feature of the Humingbird
LCG's has not been discussed so far. The feature I'm talking about
is the ability to "store" all the sounding data at a constant and
maximum resolution and for the entire width of the display.
Most sounders store only enough data to maintain the display and
this is independant of the selection of vertical scale or zoom
settings. My Humingbird always stores the entire "water column",
in this case 120 ft., at a resolution of 3 inches. Now if I change
scale or zoom-in on a target after I've passed over it, I'll get
full detail. This is true even if I need to back-up the display
to a portion which had already scrolled off of the screen.
While this method requires a great deal more image memory, it really
is a great feature. Now if I could find a good eight level amber
CRT unit with range to 400-600 ft. and the full resolution storage
of the Humingbird I'd buy it in a second.
Jerry
|
88.56 | Fiberglass Installation & Troubleshooting | CSSE::SANDER | | Thu Feb 18 1988 20:14 | 16 |
| FYI, I have a Hummingbird 1000. Mounted the transducer to the floor
of my fiberglass boat, under the middle seat. I used standard five
minute epoxy. It worked fine. During the late summer turned it on
one evening and had there is no bottom on the screen. Just the sync
line and sensitivity acroos the top. Figured the cable got nicked and
figured I would buy a new transducer for this year. I read a few replys
earlier in this note that mentioned the possible problem if a maximizer
is used. My 3HP MinnKota has a maximizer. Anybody know for sure
if the maximizer causes problems and if so what type of problems
are they. I would hate to buy a transducer and find out the unit
is defective. Would rather spend the money on a few other things
for the tackle box.
Ed
|
88.57 | Engine noise problems | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Fri Feb 19 1988 14:44 | 10 |
| Has anyone had problems with engine noise, particularly from an
I/O, showing up on a graph or flasher? How did you fix it? I have
a Mercruser 120 that gives me grief with noise. I have shielded
power cables, direct line from the battery, cabeling in the opposite
side of the boat from all other electronics, etc. Still get noise
that increases as a function of engine RPM. Shut the engine off
and I can get full gain and see pebbles on the bottom at 300 ft!
Any ideas?
Don
|
88.58 | | FEISTY::TOMAS | Joe | Fri Feb 19 1988 16:12 | 7 |
| Ideas??
Raise the sails, maybe??
(sorry...couldn't resist)
|
88.59 | | MPGS::NEAL | | Fri Feb 19 1988 16:23 | 5 |
| Have you tried using a seperate battery? If not give it a shot.
How about resistor plugs? Add a condenser to the coil? Just thinking
about how you kill noise on a car radio.
Rich
|
88.60 | Give this a try... | TOOK::SWEET | | Fri Feb 19 1988 16:24 | 9 |
| I have a merc 230 i/o and my paper machine becomes a mess as I increase
speed. At <10 knots the picture is clean then as I increase speed
the clutter gets real bad until it shows all black. I always attributed
this to bubles and water tubulence. A good experiment would be to
increase the RPM's while in nuetral and that would tell you if its
Noise or tubulence causing your problem (I will try this on my own
boat as well).
Bruce
|
88.61 | | FEISTY::TOMAS | Joe | Fri Feb 19 1988 17:46 | 20 |
|
One method of determining the source of the noise is to place an AM
portable radio next to the engine. Then tune the radio between stations.
Listen for interference on the radio as you increase/decrease engine speed.
If the noise is a grating static-type noise, the source is most likely to be
ignition (i.e. plugs, wires, distributor, etc.) Also, at low RPM's, you can
almost hear each plug firing on the radio.
If the noise is a high-pitched whine, then it's most likely alternator
or generator noise.
You might also try putting an RF choke in-line with the positive lead to the
LCR or graph. Most any electronics store carries a number of noise
supressors designed to minimize or eliminate interference from each of the
above sources.
Good luck!
Joe
|
88.62 | check ground, then ignition system | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Fri Feb 19 1988 19:29 | 19 |
| Also, put one of the chokes in the power return lead. Ground
can often be as noisy as the power lead. An often overlooked problem.
You usually don't have ground problems in a car because the whole
body is a conductor. In a Fiberglas boat, ground can often be
a source of problems due to noise being returned to the battery.
If you still have the problem and determine that it is associated
with engine noise, check the distributor cap and rotor as well as
check the resistance of all spark plug wires. Also, make sure that
the engine has a GOOD ground lead back to the battery. If you have
a point type ignition, make sure the condenser is NEW or replace
it. (above are just a few good P.M. steps for any engine.) These
minor things will usually lower ignition noise. If the problem
is alternator whine or generator noise, you are probably looking
at repairs soon anyway. Just make sure that the ground to the engine
from the battery is GOOD before you start trying to add power
conditioning items. Also, make sure that the battery terminals
are not glazed or corroded. Can cause noise due to bad connections.
Clean battery terminals and connections and check grounds before
you put a lot of money into the problem.
|
88.64 | Video has MUCH better resolution | WORSEL::DOTY | ESG Systems Product Marketing | Tue Feb 23 1988 01:27 | 27 |
| Regarding the LCD versus CRT (video).
I had the opportunity to go fishing for striped bass with a guide
(Lake Texoma, on the Texas/Oklahoma border). They used video
fishfinders (and some paper) exclusively -- the extra resolution
was required to locate fish holding at 3"-4" off of the bottom.
If you have the display shaded, it is easy to read, even in sunlight.
I had the opportunity to look at LCT and video side by side. No
contest -- the video unit has FAR greater resolution.
The video units are probably considerably more delicate than LCD's,
and seem to draw more power, but that extra resolution makes up
for a lot!
I'm planning on getting a finder this year, and it will probably
be video.
Re: -1
Be careful with finders and Maximiser's -- it seems that the current
chopping that the Maximiser works on feeds back into finders (LCD
only?) and makes them unuseable. A motorcycle battery should provide
several hours of life for a finder.
Regards,
Russ Doty
|
88.65 | Not convinced yet | FEISTY::TOMAS | Joe | Tue Feb 23 1988 12:19 | 24 |
| I don't think there's any disagreement over CRT's having better resolution.
My only concern is screen glare. Even with a sun shade installed, if I'm
standing up on the forward deck, the unit must be angled up for me to see.
If the sun is behind me then it will shine right on the screen, sun shade or
no sun shade! And although there's no problem seeing it at night, most of my
nighttime fishing is done in shallow water (10' or less) which doesn't
require the use of an LCR/CRT/flasher unit. I guess I'm still not convinced
yet that a CRT is worth the extra bucks. I'd like to see one in action on a
bright sunny day first.
I do agree, however, that a CRT is much more susceptable to damage
from bouncing around, especially while trailering. Also, most of the CRT
units I've seen are not completely sealed from moisture. The Interphase
units have thumb-wheel controls on the bottom of the unit to control
intensity and contrast, and those are not sealed. The new Eagle CRT units,
however, are using the sealed membrane method, even for varying intensity,
and appear to be much more water resistant. Eagle doesn't make them,
they're a buy out from Japan. I suspect they're the same basic unit as the
Interphase but with different housings.
BTW, Interphase has a new, lower-price CRT unit called the "Sportsman"
model. If I remember right, it's priced around $250-275.
HSJ
|
88.66 | { I Broke Down} | TPVAX3::DESROSIERS | | Tue Feb 23 1988 15:17 | 6 |
| well i finaly broke down and bought a eagle z5000 last night at
k-mart for only $179. i was wondering will this unit run off the
same battery as my mini-kota does or do i have to get another battery
the other question i have is where is the best place to mount it
on a 12ft aluminum v bottom i sit in the back of the boat at all
times.
|
88.67 | | COLORS::MACINTYRE | In search of the Largemouth Bass... | Tue Feb 23 1988 15:26 | 14 |
| Alright Ray, nice move!
As you know, I have an aluminum V also. Shooting thru the hull
doesn't work well on aluminum because of the vibrations at high
speed. So, you should probably mount it off the transom. Because
of the aluminum lip at the bottom of my transom, I mounted a block
of wood to the transom, and then mounted the transducer to block
- this also gave me a little room for trail and error, it's alot
safer screwing a couple more holes in the wood than it is to drill
more holes thru the transom. If you'll be coming to the meeting
on Saturday, you could check out how I mounted mine.
Oh yea, no problem running off the same battery -- your Minn Kota
doesn't have a maxmizer, does it?? Don
|
88.68 | RE:Interphase 20/20 | MAMTS7::VCARUSO | | Thu Mar 03 1988 15:20 | 14 |
|
I see a lot of people have been talking about the Interphase 20/20.
The price of this unit has dropped a good bit in the past 6 months.
The unit can be purchased just a few cents under 300 dollars at
Consumers marine electronics. You may have to haggle with the guy
a bit but that is what I paid for my 20/20. I think Consumer Marine
Electronics is in Neptune NJ. If anyone is interested I will get
the phone number. I have yet to try my unit out, as it was let
to me by Santy Clause. But in a month or so the unit will be bouncing
it's signals off the floor of the Atlantic Ocean. I will be happy
to provide a testimony for and interested parties. I am also worried
about the sun shining into my unit and rendering the unit useless,
but a bit of creativity will probably pay off here.
Good Luck All! Vince Caruso
|
88.69 | new unit | USRCV1::FRASCH | | Thu Mar 10 1988 19:50 | 6 |
| I saw a new Interphase unit the other day (cant remember the model
name) that has all the features of the 20/20 except boat speed,
is much smaller, looks waterproof and sells for $249.00. Even a
runabout with limited dash space shpuld be able to manage a good
mounting scheme up close to the operator!!!
|
88.70 | Z6100 on sale | WILLEE::CORTIS | | Thu Apr 21 1988 18:24 | 11 |
|
To those in the market for and Eagle fish finder,
Gander Mountian has the Z6100 on sale with a 20 degree transducer.
The cost including shipping and handling was $181.
If you need a number and or info on the feature to this unit just
drop me a line (no hooks)
barry
|
88.71 | moved | COLORS::MACINTYRE | Don MacIntyre | Tue Apr 26 1988 16:11 | 30 |
| ===============================================================================
Note 405.2 Fish Finder? 2 of 6
AIMHI::TOMAS "Joe" 25 lines 9-JUL-1987 13:40
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I've used both flashers and LCRs and, without a doubt, an LCR unit
provides greater detail to bottom structure than a flasher. The
major advantage to an LCR, even the inexpensive ones with low pixel
resolution, is that they "paint" you a picture of the bottom structure,
thus making it easier to determine what lies below, i.e., stumps,
rocks, brush, dropoffs, etc (an occasionally, fish!). The flasher,
however, requires that you watch it more frequently plus it takes
time and experience to be able to determine what, exactly, the darn
thing is trying to tell you.
Most instruction books for a flasher give you examples of what the
display looks like with different types of bottom structure. Believe
me, it can get confusing. The LCR, on the other hand, is pretty
self-explanatory.
Just remember one thing, regardless of which unit you buy...don't
plan to use it to locate fish (except for deep water trout & salmon),
use it to locate structure types that should hold fish.
Hope this helps.
-HoleShot Joe-
BTW...there are several other notes in this file that have covered
this topic in detail.
|
88.72 | Dualing Transducers? | VAX4::TOMAS | Joe | Thu May 19 1988 21:23 | 16 |
| Just a quick question...
I am thinking of mounting my new Hummingbird LCR 4000 up on the bow of my
boat next to my elec. motor. I know I won't be able to see it very well
from the stern when I'm under way, so I was thinking of using my old
Lowrance flasher as well from the stern. Is there a problem with having
BOTH units on at the same time? I don't know what frequency the flasher
operates at, but I would suspect that they would each interfere with the
other if both are at the same or similar frequencies.
Thanks...
HSJ
BTW...the LCR 4000 was my prize for 1st place in the NH Open. Just what I
always wanted. And this time....I REALLY WON IT!!
|
88.73 | Noise | MPGS::NEAL | | Fri May 20 1988 10:53 | 6 |
| From what I have seen you will have a problem with noise. When
trolling for trout I have noticed LOTS of noise on the recorder when
another boat passes that also is using sonar. Nice prize! I believe
they make a switch so that you can switch from unit to the other.
Rich
|
88.74 | | VAX4::TOMAS | Joe | Fri May 20 1988 12:13 | 17 |
| Rich,
I know that they make switches to switch between 2 LCR's and one transducer
or 2 transducers and one LCR, but my problem is that I have different brand
units (Hummingbird LCR and Lowrance flasher). I suppose that as long as
both units operate on the same frequency that it might be possible to get
away with one transducer. I would have to jury-rig a different connector
or adapter for the flasher.
If, by chance, both units operate at the same frequency, but have different
cone angles for the transducers (ex 16 degrees vs 20), will that affect the
operation of accuracy of the unit? Any electronics folks got an answer to
that one?
Thanks,
Joe
|
88.75 | Phone # | MPGS::NEAL | | Fri May 20 1988 12:43 | 8 |
| Opps, I missed that they were two differant brands. I have lowrances
phone # here, try giving them a call to customer service.
(918)437-6881
BTW Lowrance/Eagle do have a narrow angle transducer available.
Rich
|
88.76 | Does the manual have anything to say? | ANGORA::MLOEWE | ALF for president! | Fri May 20 1988 12:48 | 8 |
| re .72
My guess is that they will definitely interfer with one another.
Does your manual say anything about suppression and discrimination.
These are use to eliminate unwanted noise from the boat's engine
or running two sonar units at the same time.
Mike_L
|
88.77 | | VAX4::TOMAS | Joe | Fri May 20 1988 13:48 | 24 |
| I'll check my manuals this weekend. I do know that the Hummingbird transducer
is a 16 degree cone whereas most of the Lowrance units use a 20 degree cone.
I also know the Hummingbird frequency is 200KHz, but I'm not sure about the
Lowrance (I seem to recall 192KHz).
Questions:
1. If I were to use just one transducer for both units, would the difference
in cone angles only affect the area of the bottom being "viewed"?
2. If I were to use just one transducer for both units, would the difference
in unit frequencies have an effect on the reading. Are the transducers
capable of handling a fairly broad bandwidth or are they narrow-band
transducers?
3. If I were to use BOTH transducers, and assuming that the units operated
at 200KHz and 192Khz, is that a wide enough frequency range such that
neither would interfere with the other?
Thanks for Lowrance's phone number. I'll give them a call later. Maybe
they can answer some of these questions.
Joe
|
88.78 | put the flasher on the bow | HPSCAD::WHITMAN | Acid rain burns my BASS | Fri May 20 1988 14:06 | 26 |
| Joe,
I've got an Eagle Flasher on my bow with its transducer mounted on the
trolling motor, and an Eagle Z6000 mounted on my console with its transducer
glued to the inside of my hull. I'm not sure if your question was related to
trying to run both units off the same transducer or not. I suspect the
connectors for the transducers are not the same between the Humminbird and
the Lowrance, therefore you need two tranducers anyway.
I've had no difficulty I'm aware of. Bear in mind that my transducers
are about 16 ft apart and I'm usually fishing in 12 ft of water or less.
I chose this particular arrangement because I use the LCR to find a
particular place in the lake (read 'structure') and the memory of the LCR is
a big advantage. Once I'm in the vicinity of the structure and have the
electric down, I'm more interested in my current depth and fishing than in
locating someplace special. For this the flasher works fine. I do not shut
down the LCR when I get MinnKota wet, but I do shut off the flasher when the
trolling motor is out of the water. I tried it the other way, but found I had
difficulty reading the LCR mounted on the deck while I was standing (not a
problem with the flasher) and while driving around at the console searching for
this channel or that log etc, I had to pay too much attention to the flasher
and not enough to my driving (not a problem with the LCR).
Good luck Joe,
Al
|
88.79 | ? | COLORS::MACINTYRE | In search of the Largemouth Bass | Fri May 20 1988 14:16 | 10 |
| From what I've seen the flasher up front and LCR at the drivers seat
seem to be the more popular setup. Makes sense to me. You can use
the more detailed LCR while `driving' to look around, find structure,
dropoffs, or possibly fish, etc... And you use the flasher while
up on the deck fishing, to keep track of the depth your fishing...
But, to each his own, I'm sure there's plenty of people who'd prefer
ot the other way around.........
Don Mac
|
88.80 | | COLORS::MACINTYRE | In search of the Largemouth Bass | Fri May 20 1988 14:21 | 3 |
|
I obviously hadn't read Al's reply when I replied, I could have
just said, "Yea, do it like Al"
|
88.81 | | ARGUS::BISSELL | | Fri May 20 1988 15:48 | 8 |
| These devices are based on timing i.e. sending out and timing time
to return wich translates into distance traveled.
Since unit A would not be syncro timed with the unit B and then
would be confused if too close together.
For RADAR installations one unit is master and the other is slaved
to the master.
|
88.82 | moved | COLORS::MACINTYRE | In search of the Largemouth Bass | Tue May 31 1988 13:43 | 14 |
|
================================================================================
Note 745.0 Interphase info needed No replies
CASV02::MCNULTY 8 lines 27-MAY-1988 08:31
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I would like to know if anyone out there is familiar with the
Interphase 20/20? I (we) just purchased one at Zyla's and
I was hoping we could get some info on this unit, good and bad
points appreciated (hopefully not many bad). Mounting hints,
transducer location, etc. Thank you in advance.
Mike McNulty
|
88.84 | Just a "little" BUMP - honest. | CGVAX2::HAGERTY | Jack Hagerty KI1X | Fri Jun 17 1988 15:06 | 13 |
| I fished "Stumpfield" in Hopkinton,NH both on saturday and monday
and went directly into the back of the stumps where they are really
THICK. Somewhere I must have bumped my transducer. My guess is the
wind gets you going and before you recover/realize- BUMP. The only
problem is the LCR has a speed indicator. And
the transducer a little paddle wheel kind of thing. (Well it used
to...) Anyway - its a Ray Jeffereson 500 and my book doesnt show
a replacement part. (Doesnt even show it in any of the diagrams!!)
Besides going back to the dealer for $$$ who carries spares for
that kind of thing??
The LCR still works. and it still shows water temp.
Suggestions??? (Not hardly as bad as the Worms - BUMP)
|
88.85 | salt too | RAINBO::MACINTYRE | In search of the Largemouth Bass | Fri Jun 17 1988 16:13 | 4 |
| How about salt? The day after fishing the St. Johns in Florida,
near the mouth, I noticed the screen of my LCR was stained - and
is still stained...
donmac
|
88.86 | It happened to me too | SA1794::CUZZONES | God, I love this place!!!! | Fri Jun 17 1988 16:37 | 7 |
| re:.83
Too bad, Bob. Deep Woods Off ruined my watch crystal last summer.
Maybe there's a safer solution. I hate to go out at night without
some repellent.
Steve
|
88.87 | A simple fix maybe ???? | VICKI::DODIER | | Fri Jun 17 1988 16:52 | 7 |
| I don't have a LCD but I was thinking that maybe you could put
Saran (sp?) wrap on the screen. Then you could just peel it of and put
some new stuff on once in a while. There is also some spray on stuff
used to seal drafty windows that also peels off. Both should protect
the screen and be 100% tranparent.
RAYJ
|
88.88 | Try this - if you dare... | CASV05::PRESTON | Curious George & th'Temple of Doom | Fri Jun 17 1988 17:11 | 11 |
|
I have only *heard* this, but, supposedly, Avon Skin-So-Soft works
great as an insect repellent. Just think, no bugs, no ruined watches
or fish-finders, and... soft hands!!
Put it in another container, though. I wouldn't be caught dead carrying
that silly-looking bottle around...
Ed
|
88.89 | Hide it in another bottle! | VIDEO::LEVESQUE | I fish, therefore I am. | Fri Jun 17 1988 17:20 | 11 |
| Yes, sports fans, Avon skin so soft works pretty well. I'd call
it something else, but I don't want to get on Don Mac's bad side
so soon. We used some while playing volleyball next to what must have
been the eastern united states mosquito breeding grounds, and it
kept the little buggers away.
I guess I'm lucky that I took off my watch before I sprayed myself
with deep woods off last tuesday. I'd be pretty P.O. if I ruined
the crystal.
The Doctah
|
88.90 | | FSLENG::JOLLIMORE | For the greatest good... | Fri Jun 17 1988 19:00 | 8 |
| .86 .88
Pennyroyal oil works well as an insect repellent. Available from any herb
or healthfood store.
Won't make your skin so soft tho ;')
Jay
|
88.91 | | VAX4::TOMAS | Joe | Fri Jun 17 1988 19:11 | 12 |
| I was out last night on Hopkinton Lake (aka Stumpfield) in NH and there
were bazillions of a little white fly around. They don't bite...and
therefore insect repellent doesn't work as DET-type repellents are only
for "biting, chewing and gnawing" type insects. These flies are truely
bothersome, and within minutes you get totally covered by them. They
really make your skin crawl (literally!).
I wonder if this Skin-so-soft will help? BTW...I've never seen these
flies anywhere but on this pond. DonMac and others can attest to that,
I'm sure.
hsj
|
88.93 | Used de 20w in de summer... | DPDMAI::BEAZLEY | | Sun Jun 19 1988 03:52 | 8 |
| Hey, I tryed dat Pennzoil de other nite an it wurks pretty good.
Kept dem muskeeters off, dem ticks off, dem chiggers off, an dem
horsfiles off, but my wife wudnt let me come in de house!!!
So, me I jes staid an did som nite fishin. Caught som big ones,
too!!
Coonass
|
88.94 | Skin-So-Stink | CTOAVX::EGAN | | Mon Jun 20 1988 19:41 | 5 |
| re .88
I have heard the same story about the Avon Skin-So-Soft. If you
slow-mo the movie JAWS in the scene where Quint is at the blackboard,
you will notice a bttle of this stuff sticking out of his back pocket.
|
88.95 | End of the FLEA circus. | MJOVAX::OWENS | Oh sure...ABUSE THE ALIEN | Tue Jun 21 1988 13:41 | 9 |
| At the recommedation (?) of this file, I bought some skin-so-soft
on Saturday. I talked to one person who sprays it around the entrance
to their camper and swears they never have a mosquito in the camper.
I used it on our dog and you could see the fleas jumping off. She
has not had a flea problem since Saturday. Also used it on the
lake Sat. nite and was not bothered by bugs at all.
We even caught a couple of 2lber's and a huge chain pickerel.
|
88.96 | | SALEM::RIEU | Bill the Cat in '88 | Tue Jun 21 1988 14:54 | 2 |
| I hear you should mix it half-and-half with water.
Denny
|
88.97 | Another vote for skin so soft | WILLEE::CORTIS | | Tue Jun 21 1988 17:00 | 11 |
|
Yes skin-so-soft is great stuff. We live by some wet lands and have
many many bitting insects.
We cover the kids as well as the dog. It's the only thing that really
seems to work well. Also if your not into spreading harmfull chemicals
all over ya then Avon's stuff has another plus.
Re:-1 , I've heard of mixing half and half but have not tried it
yet. It's not costly anyways.
barry
|
88.98 | | DR::HAIGH | | Wed Jun 22 1988 14:20 | 11 |
| My wife is a "ding Dong" oops, Avon rep.
They publish a complete page of uses for SSS, I have it on line
if any one wants it. (send mail to get a copy)
I use it as a bug repelant. They even sell it now in nice little
pump spray bottles.
David.
|
88.99 | Lowrance down the tubes? | VAX4::TOMAS | Joe | Fri Apr 21 1989 14:28 | 6 |
| I heard an interesting rumor... Lowrance has filed Chapter 11!
ANy heard this?
-HSJ-
|
88.100 | Quick..My fingers are itchin' to make the call... | CECV03::SURRETTE | | Tue May 02 1989 12:50 | 26 |
|
O.K. Here goes. I have my hand on the phone right now and I
gonna call BASS pro shops and order an EAGLE Z7200 LCR for ~ $234.00
I have looked at many (if not most) LCRs on the market and personally
think that the 7200 for the money is the best buy. It comes with
a transom mount 20 degree cone transducer. The graphic seem to
be superior to all other graphs in that price range (the most
impressive LCRs I've seen are the Bottom line series, but they
are serious $$$$).
So being the novice that I am when it comes to LCRs (along with
many other things ) I'm diplaying this note to get someone to
talk me into/out of buying this particular unit. I realize that
LCRs are subject to personal opinions, but I'm definitely into
listening to them.
Thanks in advance.
Gus
(Actually, I'm willing to bet that BPS will NOT have this particular
unit in stock, since no one else seems to)
|
88.101 | Go For It | EDRON1::DOTY | Russell Doty, ESG | Tue May 09 1989 16:40 | 18 |
| I ordered the 7200 for one simple reason -- resolution. The resolution
was "comparable" to the video units for much less.
I got it on the boat a few weeks ago, and have used it twice.
Resolution is good and the display is crisp and readable. Easy
to understand (in automatic mode -- it has about 17 pages of menues
for setting it. So far, I just turn it on and let it run.)
This is my first finder, so I can't comare it to anything else,
but I'm happy with it. (And have already learned several things
about my usual lake.)
My only regret is that it doesn't support optional speed and
temperature sensors. However, for twice the resolution, it still
seems like the way to go.
Regards,
Russ
|
88.102 | Do you want speed or resolution? | BTOVT::MORONG | | Wed May 10 1989 12:40 | 22 |
| I'm going thru the exact same situation. Trying to decide on which
fish finder to buy. I really wanted the trolling speed indicator and
surface temp gauge capability, but you have to sacrifice resolution
to get it (and keep it reasonable $$$). I spoke to a local dealer
(Datillio's for those BTO'ers) and found out pretty much what I sus-
pected. There are Eagle finders that have the speed and temp gauges
for the $180-$220 range, but they have less than 80 pixels vertically.
This is not real good for "spotting" fish. If you get into the high-
er resolution machines (i.s. Z7200 for $234), which have 192 pixels
vertically, you can see the fish, but you don't get the speed on temp
gauges, even as an add-on. Of course you could get into the high $$$
machines and get the resolution and gauges, but I can't spend that
kind of money ($400+).
I think I will be going with the $234 on the Z7200. At least I will
be able to spot the fish. Does anybody know where you can get just the
speed indicator gauge (not part of a fish finder, just a separate in-
strument)??? Maybe next year I will purchase one of those. I would like
it accurate to 1/10 of a mph. I haven't seen any around in any mail-
order magazines (cabela's or bass pro).
-Ron-
|
88.103 | | TYCOBB::WOOD | | Wed May 10 1989 18:03 | 29 |
| I bought a Z7000 2 years ago and it had a temp probe with it,
and a connection for a speed sensor. I picked up the eagle
speed sensor and it works great. The unit logs the number of
miles you've traveled and gives the speed readout down to tenths
of a mph (or knots or km depending on how you set it). It can't
be beat for setting your trolling speed. I'm surprised they
discontinued these features on the Z7200. Last year the unit quit
sensing temp (turned out to be the sensor was bad), and I returned
it to eagle for repair and they informed me that they would update
the software in it to match their latest model for free, and that
for an extra 36$ they would change the display to match the latest
model...It was a blue screen that showed up better in the sun. I
had the unit back in less than a week. I'm not sure how many pixels
are in the display, but it marks fish real well, even on the bottom.
Maybe I got the best of both worlds...
The only time things are difficult are when you want to chart the
bottom at depths of 150 ft or so as you have to turn the sensitivity
way up, and that causes noise to appear, and you start loosing
confidence as to a mark being a fish, or a glitch...the other problem
is at high speed the unit tends to loose track of the depth if the
bottom structure changes rapidly. Your adrenalin can get right up
there when your doing 50mph and all of a sudden the display starts
flasing on and off...you don't know if the bottom is coming up fast,
or dropping off fast, so you grab the throttle fast and pull it
back, usually pissing off everyone else in the boat as they end
up wearing drinks, sandwiches or whatever!
Marty
|
88.104 | LCR 4-ID | SALEM::PAINE | | Tue Dec 26 1989 17:23 | 30 |
|
I HAVE A HUMMINGBIRD 4ID MOUNTED ON BASSTRACKER V-16 SPECIAL.
IT HAS A AUDIBLE ALARM WHICH CAN BE SET FOR DEPTH WARNING,
A AUDIBLE ALARM ON APPROACHING AND LOCATING FISH OF WHICH
HAS A SENSITIVITY CONTROL SO IT WILL ONLY ALERT YOU TO THE
LARGER FISH AND NOT BE TRIGGERED BY SMALL BAIT FISH.
THE LCR HAS THE STANDARD SIZE SCREEN,ALTHOUGH IT DIFFERS
FROM THE REST BY IDENTIFYING STRUCTURE IN BLACK;ROCKS,TREES,ETC.
WATER IS A GREY BACKGROUND AND THE FISH ARE EASILY RECOGNIZED IN
RED THE LARGER FISH APPEAR AS RED WITH BLACK SPECKS INDICATING
HOGS.
THE LCR HAS AMONG ITS FEATURES ZOOM CONTROLS,RECALL TO REPEAT
VIEW OF AREA JUST PASSED OVER,A LIGHT FOR EARLY SALMON AND TOGUE'S,
FISHING AT DAWN OR AT NIGHT.
I HAVE TO CONFESS THE LCR 4-ID DID NOT COME WITH MY TRACKER BUT
IT WAS A EQUIPMENT UPGRADE FROM THE 2000 MODEL WHICH COMES STANDARD
PERSONALLY I THINK ITS GREAT ESPECIALLY HAVING THE FISH APPEARING
IN RED THERE-BY ELIMINATING GUESS WORK AS IS THE CASE OF OTHER LCR'S..
IT CAN BE ORDERED THRU BASS PRO SHOPS OR CABELLO'S ABOUT THE SAME
MONEY ITS ABOUT $279. OR $379. I CAN'T REMEMBER EXACTLY BUT IT
HAS PUT ME ON FISH EVERY TIME AND I HAVE HAD IT THREE YEARS NOW
WITH NO PROBLEMS!
HOPE THIS HELP'S------------ TIGHT LINES
REMEMBER A BAD FISHING IS STILL BETTER THAN A GOOD DAY WORKING !
Z
|
88.105 | WHAT'S THE LATEST | ISLNDS::FOTHERGILL | | Mon Feb 05 1990 17:20 | 16 |
| ALL RIGHT WHAT'S THE LATEST IN SONAR? THERE HAVEN'T BEEN A LOT
OF NOTES IN THIS TOPIC LATLEY SO I THOUGHT I WOULD KICK IT OFF AGAIN
SINCE I WILL BE SPENDING SOME MONEY SOON.
AT THE FISHING SHOW THIS WEEKEND, I TALKED TO THE EAGLE REP AND
THE HUMMUNGBIRD REP AND AM NOW AS CONFUSED AS I EVER WAS. THESE
TWO ORGANIZAITONS SEEM TO HAVE THE REASONABLY PRICED STUFF.
ANY INPUTS ON THE MODELS THAT YOU HAVE WOULD BE GREATLY APPRECIATED.
ONE OTHER QUESTION: THE HUMMUNGBIRD HAS A 455 KHZ VS THE 192 KHZ
THAT EAGLE PROFESSES TO BE BEST. HWAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES AND
DISADVANTAGES OF A HIGHER FREQUENCYU UNIT.
THANKS FOR ANY INPUT.
|
88.106 | | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Mon Feb 05 1990 18:54 | 2 |
| re .105>
The lower frequency transducers penetrate deeper.
|
88.107 | Humminbird fan | DECWET::HELSEL | Legitimate sporting purpose | Mon Feb 05 1990 19:41 | 34 |
| I don't know about fresh water applications, but most of the folks I
talk to in the deep, salt water spots I fish tend to be very happy
with Humminbird Equipment and the Eagle customers have been less
satisfied in the past.
I think that .105 is speaking about the sampling rate of Humminbird
vs. Eagle in deep water (I could be wrong) but I believe that
Humminbird has the best sampling rate (fast) at any depth, hence
greater resolution.
Eagles tend to be more price competitive, but IMHO, I don't think that
you can beat a Humminbird. I fish in 100-300', so if I were fishing
in shallower water, I might think otherwise.
If you can't tell, I have a Humminbird and love it. I also like the
fact that Humminbird backs up their products with 24 hour turnaround
service and Federal Express transportation. With the two units I've
owned, I've never had the opportunity to test this out. Come to think
of it, I don't have any friends that have needed repairs and I'd say
that between us.....there has been some abuse of their products ;-).
I went to the two sportsmens' shows in ourarea this weekend and I will
say that I am amazed at the functionality competitiveness between the
major manufacturers on a year to year basis. My current Humminbird is
two years old and it is as outdated as an 11/780 compared to the new
Humminbird products. There are other productsd out there that look
pretty good like Impulse, but I have no information base from which
to base a recommendation.
Hope this helps,
/brett
|
88.108 | | 16BITS::LUCIA | Ice fishing makes your worm stiff | Mon Feb 05 1990 19:54 | 11 |
| If my physics serve me correctly, the higher frequency will give better
resolution than the lower one, regardless of the sampling rate.
Remember the formula Freq = 1/lambda. A higher frequency will have a
smaller wavelength which will detect smaller objects or better detail
on larger ones.
Tim
p.s. I know this to be true of radar detectors, which operate in the
GHz range, giving wavelengths of 1/1000s inches!
|
88.109 | | ABACUS::TOMAS | Joe | Tue Feb 06 1990 11:21 | 24 |
| I've had my Hummingbird LCR 4000 for a couple of years now and it has always
performed well. I did send it back to the factory under warranty as
condensation was forming on the display. I got it back within a couple of
days and they even threw in a cover. Unfortunately, the same problem has
occurred again in only one season's use. Despite this problem, I'm still
satisfied with the unit although I think I'm ready for something better.
I've been looking at the new Eagle Ultra which has better resolution and
greyline capabilities. I was out with a friend last year who owns the Eagle
Z-9000 and it was super! The Ultra offers a lot of the same features and
the same resolution but on a smaller screen.
Since I've started fishing deeper waters (20-40') for smallies, I think the
greyline capabilities will help me to differentiate the composition of the
bottom, i.e. hard vs soft. My Hummingbird can show structure, but it's
difficult to know whether I'm looking at weeds or rocks...both look very
similar. I believe that the greyline feature can help to distinguish
between the two once you learn how to read it.
Of course...there's always a paper chart recorder too! A few more $$$,
though! Decisions....decisions....
-HSJ-
|
88.110 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I've got the fire | Tue Feb 06 1990 12:14 | 47 |
| Frequency, etc
When you buy a sonar unit, you must be aware of the type of fishing you are
going to be doing. If you are planning on fishing very deep water, say, 300
feet and more, you will want to consider very seriously a unit in the 50KHz
range. When a manufacturer speaks of frequency, they are referring to the
transducer, that piece that is placed in the water through which you send
and receive the signals.
If you fish shallow to moderately deep water, you will find that a higher
frequency transducer, as Tim stated, will give you better resolution _at the
expense of depth penetration_.
Another factor to consider is the angle of the "cone." The cone refers to the
volume of water under the boat which is in the transducer's field of reception.
If you look at the transducer as a point from which the sound emanates, the
water which you can "see" via the transducer is shaped like an upside down
ice-cream cone. The diameter of the cone at any depth is a function of the
cone angle.
Deepwater units have narrower cones. Shallow water units have wider cones.
Some units have a transducer frequency that is fairly high but has a narrow
enough cone angle to send sufficient energy to increase penetration (depth
range).
Commercial boats often have a wide cone unit as well as a narrow cone unit
on the same boat. When you move the boat so that you see fish on the wide cone
unit, you are in the right area. When you see them also on the narrow cone
unit, you are right over them.
For those of us who can only afford a single unit, make sure the cone is not
too wide nor too narrow. A cone that is too wide (for the depth you normally
fish) will make you think you are "over fish" when in fact they are way off
to the side. A cone that is too narrow will cause you to miss fish only a
few feet off to the side.
Take an hour or two and go to the library. Take some notes. Or borrow some
back-issues of Saltwater Sportsman or SportFishing. Both of these magazines have
had good and informative articles on sonar in the past year or two.
If you are going to be shelling out your hard-earned money, take an hour or two
to ensure your investment will be made wisely. You've already made the right
first step- asking.
Good luck- happy fishing.
The Doctah
|
88.111 | SPEED, not wavelength | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Wed Feb 07 1990 00:33 | 23 |
| I have to disagree slightly with the description in -.1. The
radiation pattern of a TYPICAL depth finder is more like a palm tree
top on an ice cream cone. There is a diffraction of the signal near
the surface that causes lots of side lobes. This gives the palm tree
type top in shallow water. If you are using a very low frequency
(50kHz) transducer unit in shallow water, you will have to turn the
sensitivity down to such a degree that the resolution will be almost
totally lost to keep the diffration pattern from interfering with the
signal you are trying to receive (DEPTH LESS THAN 5 FEET). Now, with a
high frequency unit, the directivity of the signal is such that the
diffration at the transducer is neglible. So, if you want good clear
DEEP water use, go with 50 kHz. If you are looking for things in 3
feet of water, use 400 kHz.
The wavelength difference at these frequencies is not the limiting
factor. The limiting factor for depth is the slower speed of sound in
water than radio frequencies in air. So, a higher repetition rate for
the sonar unit (400 kHz) causes a MAXIMUM depth for measurement of
approximately 200 feet before the transducer unit sends a second pulse
prior to the return of the first pulse. This gives a false receive
signal. A 50 kHz unit has a maximum depth of about 1500 feet. The
limiting factor again is the SPEED of the signal in the water, not the
wavelength of the transmitted signal. (I KNOW, PICKY, PICKY, PICKY!!!)
:-) :-)
|
88.112 | Hate to disagree....but | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Wed Feb 07 1990 11:53 | 35 |
| Re .107>
Brett,
I was surprised that the West Coast fishermen prefer Hummingbird
for salt water applications, particularly the high frequency model. Lower
frequency transducers penetrate the depths better ...i.e. even the
Hummingbird deep water models use a lower frequency (200kHz). Eagle I
believe uses 192kHz as standard. I've also seen some deep water fish
finders (don't remember which manufacturer) which use a transducer
frequency below 100kHz.
Power is another factor in depth penetration and I believe Eagle
surpasses Hummingbird in that regard also.
As far as resolution goes I may be wrong but I would think that
on an LCD unit the display would be the limiting factor, not the transducer
frequency.Even if frequency was the gate increased resolution would be at
the expense of depth penetration.
Both brands advertise totally water proof packaging but Eagle also
charges their unit with dry Nitrogen to avoid fogging.
My last point of disagreement is price. I have found that Eagle and
Hummingbird are similarly prices; actually I believe the Eagle models are
slightly higher. This may be because the Hummingbirds are sold in chain
department stores more than Eagle.
I don't to imply that Hummingbird is inferior, both brands are of
high quality and have excellent reputations but I always thought of the
Hummingbird line as targeting fresh water applications and Eagle being more
dual purpose.
As far as my own experience with my Eagle (6100?...I never pay
attention to model numbers), I have had no cause to have it repaired in the
four years I've been using it. I have had complaints but mostly in shallow
water applications.
I use an 8 degree transducer to enhance the depth penetration. I
frequently find myself cruising in 400' or better depths looking for
bumps which rise up to about 200'. This is pretty difficult duty for a
fish finder but the Eagle has done its job fairly well.
Just a different viewpoint I guess.
Paul
|
88.113 | not quibbling; trying to get to the bottom of this :-) | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Dissident aggressor | Wed Feb 07 1990 12:42 | 29 |
| re: "palm tree effect"
That's lesson 2. Thanks for giving it. :-) :-)
>So, a higher repetition rate for
> the sonar unit (400 kHz) causes a MAXIMUM depth for measurement of
> approximately 200 feet before the transducer unit sends a second pulse
> prior to the return of the first pulse.
What's to stop a manufacturer from slowing down the repetition rate of the
higher frequency transducers?
I believe that one of the reasons that the higher frequency transducers
utilize higher repetition rates is due to the fact that higher frequency signals
lose their energy faster, hence are limited with respect to the maximum
depth acheivable for a given return signal strength. Anyone want to whip out
an old physics book? :-)
>The
> limiting factor again is the SPEED of the signal in the water, not the
> wavelength of the transmitted signal.
The speed of a 50KHz signal and a 400 KHz signal is the same. It seems to me
that if speed were the only factor, there would be no reason to use a 50KHz
transducer, because you could use a 400KHz transducer and match the repetition
rate to that of a 50KHz unit, thus obtaining identical depth penetration with
a higher resolution.
The Doctah
|
88.114 | No clear winner | DECWET::HELSEL | Legitimate sporting purpose | Wed Feb 07 1990 16:15 | 31 |
| Well, there you have it. It looks like Eagle and Humminbird have
the biggest following and among them, it's personal favorites.
I have a TCD 400 (?) I'm not real good at model numbers either.
Plus they change the numbers so fast on reels and depth finders
etc that they confuse the customers more than DEC. (Anyone know how
many model numbers shimano has introduced in the last 5 years????)
Anyway, I thought mine was around 200 Khz. I could be wrong. I'd have
to check. It gives a picture of the bottom, but I have no indication
as to composition from the picture......either that or all the bottom
that I fish is the same (which is likely). I'm always deeper than 100'.
Maybe in shallower depth, or mud bottom the bottom might look
different.
I always thought that Eagles were cheaper. There goes that myth.
It looks like the person that asked hasn't got any better idea whether
Eagle or Humminbird is better. Another way to look at it is that they
are both good :-)
Hey, what can I say? I like Penn reels and downriggers, Humminbirds
and American Trucks and outboards.
/brett
P.S. Here we have a facitlity called Costco, which I believe is
similar to BJ Warehouse (???). Usually, Costco gets a bunch of
depthsounders (usually Eagle or Humminbird from what I've seen)
around this time of the year. You might keep your eyes open if you're
a member and are looking for one. I didn't buy mine there, but I
sure wish I had. ;-)
|
88.115 | I guess we agree afterall | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Wed Feb 07 1990 16:53 | 7 |
| Re -1>
Brett,
We agree on reels, downriggers, outboards and trucks. Actually
the reason I responded was that the original question concerning the
units referred to the 455kHz model so I thought you were discussing that.
I'd guess that the difference between the 200kHz and 192kHz would be minimal.
Paul
|
88.116 | MAJOR change to change frequency | GENRAL::HUNTER | from SUNNY Colorado, Wayne | Thu Feb 08 1990 13:38 | 24 |
| The reason for the greater depth with the 50 kHz vs. the 400 kHz
rate is that the 400 kHz unit transmits 8 times the amount of pulses
per period of the 50 kHz unit. So, with the faster pulse rate, you can
look only 1/8 as far before you get return interferance
(intermodulation error) pulses. You can change the time-out period
between transmit pulses to increase the depth ability slightly. (Which
is what your unit does to discriminate between depth ranges like 0-10,
or 0-60 feet.) However, when you use too low a pulse repetition rate
with higher frequency, the return signal power is much lower due to
scatter effect of the signal in the water and doppler problems. (The
higher the frequency, the greater the doppler.) Since a sonar is
looking ONLY for TIME delta from transmitted signal to received signal,
any doppler causes a reduction in received signal strength.
As for having a dual frequency transducer, it would cost a MINIMUM
of twice as much as a single frequency unit since the coil in the
transducer is a TUNED coil to maximize its power transfer
characteristics and get the best signal for the least energy. So, to
have a dual frequency transducer, you have to design NOT ONLY 2 coils
into the transducer, BUT must also design the coupling characteristics
of the coils to minimize interraction and signal loss. The amount of
design time would be greatly increased in this case. In addition, you
would have to have some type of switching circuitry involved. It is
not just a matter of "change the frequency inside the display unit".
|
88.117 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Baron Samedi | Fri Feb 09 1990 13:25 | 14 |
| >However, when you use too low a pulse repetition rate
> with higher frequency, the return signal power is much lower due to
> scatter effect of the signal in the water and doppler problems.
This is exactly what I've been saying. :-) Good, my faith in physics has
been restored. :-)
> As for having a dual frequency transducer,
I've heard of a few of those, but what I was talking about wrt commercial
boats was that they have a minimum of two complete and separate units, one
of each flavor.
The Doctah
|
88.118 | Eagle Speed and Temp options? | DELNI::G_FISHER | | Mon Feb 19 1990 15:41 | 14 |
| I currently have a Z6000 and at the end of last season was just getting
used to it (that means I got brave enough to take it out of manual
mode).
I am interested in the temperature/speed options. Based on the
conversation a few replies back, I am not sure now which Eagle models
have these options. I thought both the Z7000 and Z9000 series had them.
Can someone point me a the current set of Eagle LCDs that support these
features?
Thanks,
Guy
|
88.119 | hummingbird dimension 3 | STAFF::WOOD | | Fri Dec 14 1990 14:33 | 18 |
| There's an interesting article in one of the engineering rags (EDN)
this month that mentions the new hummigbird dimension 3 unit. This
is the nifty little unit (that we all want!) that shows a 3d image
of the bottom, fish sizes and a host of other stuff....Well, in
my normal skepticism I figured it was just more data processing.
The size fish it displayed was still relative to the boat speed,
length of time the fish is in the cone etc., and that the bottom
picture was governed by the same factors, not an accurate picture
proportionately to what was really down there.
It seems they are detecting RF signals which indicate the presence
of fish with a signetics FM-IF demodulator. The article wasn't to
clear on how they are doing this. It means what you see is whats
really there....
Anyone else see this article ?
Marty
|
88.120 | | MRKTNG::TOMAS | | Mon Dec 17 1990 13:48 | 13 |
| When I first saw the ads for the Hunningbird 3-D LCR, my first impression
was..."it's about time!" Then, upon closer examination of the picture, it
was obvious the Hummingbird STILL has not done much to improve overall
pixel resolution.
Then I saw that Eagle was planning to introduce a similar LCR. Judgeing
from the photos I saw, the Eagle resolution was superior and I think
they're being offered for a lower price.
In any event, it will be interesting to see how good they really are.
Let's see what the vendors have to say when we hit the Centrum this year.
-HSJ-
|
88.121 | Bottom Line fish finders? | FSCORE::KAYE | where's my Kama Sutra pop-up book for zero-g | Mon Mar 11 1991 17:55 | 3 |
| Anyone have anything to say about the fish finders from Bottom Line?
mark
|
88.122 | Propaganda | JUPITR::NEAL | | Tue Mar 12 1991 10:11 | 8 |
| Has anyone seen the Eagle ad thrashing on the Hummingbird
Dimension 3. They basically said it dont work as advertised.
According to Eagle what it shows on the screen does not reflect
what is on the bottom. They did a side by side comparison.
through a marked course with various objects put in place including
a large bass that the Hummingbird missed 9 out of 10 times.
Rich
|
88.123 | What's the Bottom Line on this? | MTADMS::DUPRE | bust a move for the fish'n hole | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:58 | 8 |
| As .121 asked about Bottom line fish finders I was also wonder about
there SIDEFINDER. Is this a new product this year? Does anyone know
anything about this unit? I heard that they will retail for around
$230.00 - $250.00. What do others think about this side view versus
the usual bottom view? Could this be the best thing since sliced bread
for fishing in the shallows? Any comments?
Russ
|
88.124 | Interphase LCD? | FAVAX::REDFIELD | | Mon Mar 18 1991 21:13 | 29 |
| This is the year I plan on installing a fishfinder and have investigated
the wide variety of units available.
My needs:
1. Most of my fishing done in Nantucket Sound i.e. typical depths
are less than 100 ft.
2. Occasional 2-300 foot bottom fishing.
3. Very infrequently I get the desire to try some big game action
around the 100 fathom line.
I have pretty much settled on an LCD for two reasons unit size (depth) and
an LCD's ability not to wash out. My local marine electronic shop is
strongly suggesting an amber crt unit (I think largely because they do not
have a good lcd line!).
The Interphase line seems to have a couple of excellent models. One
operates at a 640' max depth with only one frequency available, while the
other model operates at 1280' with both 50/200 hz capability. Both have
loran plotter capability.
Question...is the 1280 ft model worth the cost premium. Should I infer
that the ability to operate at 1280 ft will make for a better unit at 600?
Does anyone have any alternative suggestions to Interphase given my needs?
Thanks,
Carl
|
88.125 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | | Tue Mar 19 1991 11:34 | 31 |
| >I have pretty much settled on an LCD for two reasons unit size (depth) and
>an LCD's ability not to wash out. My local marine electronic shop is
>strongly suggesting an amber crt unit (I think largely because they do not
>have a good lcd line!).
There is another strong reason to go with a CRT unit: resolution. LCD
technology, while improved, has not yet acheived the same pixel density of
CRT units. This translates into less accurate pictures, as roundoff error
creeps into the equation. I personally would not choose an LCD for this reason,
except as a backup.
>Question...is the 1280 ft model worth the cost premium. Should I infer
>that the ability to operate at 1280 ft will make for a better unit at 600?
Part of what you are paying for in the 1280 ft model is a more powerful
transducer, and part of it is the dual nature of the transducer. With a dual
frequency range, you have the ability to both find fish in a general area as
well as pinpoint fish under your boat. The difference is in the way that
the different frequencies are propagated through the water. One frequency
will have wider cone than the other, which allows you to see more of the bottom.
The other has a narrow cone with a higher definition within the cone- allowing
you to pintpoint fish once you've found the general area. It is a pretty nifty
feature. That alone can justify the expense to some anglers. I would pay the
premium if it is not excessive to get the increased performance.
Might I suggest that you stop by your local library and look through some
back issues of SPORTFISHING (Can't remember which issues offhand). They explain
comprehensively how to get the most out of your sonar units, and how they
work, etc. Excellent reading.
the Doctah
|
88.126 | I prefer LCD's | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Tue Mar 19 1991 15:17 | 27 |
| Carl,
I am not familiar with particular models since I'm not actively
looking right now but I do have some opinions on the virtues of various
features based on my own salt water experiences.
I prefer the LCD models. The resolution is getting pretty good
and I feel they are better suited for me because of their small size,
physical robustness, low cost, and low power consumption.
These characteristics are important to me because I have a 22' walk
around cuddy type boat and space for electronics is definitely scarce. I also
trailer the boat and go like a bat out of hell in the water so my electronics
suffer a lot of physical abuse; I think the LCD's will hold up to this better
than the CRT's. Cost is self explanatory and power consumption is an issue
for me since I frequently run a live well and occasionally RADAR.
As far as features go, I'd like all the bells and whistles. Dual
freq transducer would be great for the wide range of depth you are dealing
with in the salt. As the Doctah said, the cone angle may also be different,
although I think that's independent of the freq. I use a narrow (8 deg.) cone
angle and someday plan to hook up the standard 20 deg. version with a switch
so I can get better shallow water performance.
I have a separate LORAN, speedometer and surface water temp gauge
but would strongly consider the combinations available today. You can get all
of the above for less than what I paid for the LORAN alone. I don't know if
these combos act as well as the separate units but if they do I'd get them.
BTW - If the combos are available in CRT as well, then the space consideration
would of course be less of a factor.
Good Luck With Your Purchase,
Paul
|
88.127 | my CRT is fine | PENUTS::GORDON | | Tue Mar 19 1991 15:33 | 13 |
| I have a Ray Jefferson color crt fishfinder. It came with the boat so
its at least 3 years old and probably 5. I leave it on all the time I
am running the boat and as with Paul in the previous reply beat the
Hell out of it running in the chop and pounding in the seas.
I have not had any trouble with it so far. It is mounted behind the
windshield but still gets some spray from time to time. I had trouble
with glare off the screen but polorized GREY sunglass lenses eliminated
this problem.
gordon
problem
|
88.128 | Inputs | FAVAX::REDFIELD | | Wed Mar 20 1991 21:00 | 15 |
| I appreciate the inputs.
The rationale regarding having both 50/200 hz transducers certainly make
sense. I also agree that LCD resolution has come along way...probably
quite functional for my application.
I already have a loran and intend to hook up the two for plotting
capability. I currently have a Raytheon 570.
An excellent unit for those who have no loran and are looking for a combo
device is the Raytheon 730 which has all the features integrated.
Now to find a "deal" on the Interphase 1000DC!
carl
|
88.129 | Fish Finders for 1991 | USRCV1::RECUPAROR | | Mon Apr 15 1991 18:44 | 28 |
| Sorry moderator if this is in the wrong place, But I thought I would
start a new topic on Fish Finders.
I am going to buy a fish Finder this year and know just about nothing
about them. I would like some information and I'm sure there are
people out there with the experence.
1. What functions do I really need
What functions would be nice
What functions are useless
2. Brand name info
Apelco
Egale
Impulse
Hummingbird
3. Through haul Transducers (pros + cons if any)
Triducer????
Any info would be appreciated
Rick
|
88.130 | For What Use?? | RCODLF::FRASCH | | Mon Apr 15 1991 19:46 | 10 |
| Rick,
I suggest the first thing to do is determine what you want to use it for. Then
we can go from there.
ie, Bass fishing on inland lakes, Salmon and Trout trolling on Ontario, Etc.
????
Don
|
88.131 | TRY AGAIN | USRCV1::RECUPAROR | | Wed Apr 17 1991 20:41 | 21 |
| I ANSWERED WITH THE WRONG COMMAND (WRITE INSTEAD OF REPLY) SO THE
FOLLOWING RESPONSE WAS MENT FOR HERE.
SORRY STILL LEARNING
<<< Note 1572.0 by USRCV1::RECUPAROR >>>
-< Still learning >-
Good question, I should have made that clear. I've only been fishing
actively for the past two years so please excuse any stupid questions
or answers.
Most of my fishing will be done in Onieda Lake which is a shallow lake
(<60 feet) and most of the time I will be fishing for Walleye and
Purch. I do trailler my boat so I do get to the Finger Lakes and
Ontario but since I don't have down riggers I will not be going in the
deep water. All-in-all I will be fishing for what ever I can catch so
I would like some flexability if thats possible.
Rick
|
88.131 | moved | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Synapse Collapse | Thu Apr 18 1991 11:08 | 13 |
88.132 | moved
| WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Synapse Collapse | Thu Apr 18 1991 11:09 | 13 |
| <<< RANGER::$2$DUA31:[NOTES$LIBRARY]FISHING.NOTE;2 >>>
-< The Fishing Notes - Home for wayward Terminal Anglers >-
================================================================================
Note 1571.0 Good fishing nearby Onieda No replies
WLDWST::GARRISON 7 lines 16-APR-1991 18:46
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You should check out Mad river in Camden. I lived there for a year 10
years ago. The brown trout fishing is excellent. All I ever used was a
1/8 oz black roostertail. Start where the river crosses the road into
town from Rome (I think its highway 20 but I'm not sure). There's fish
both upstream and downstream to the junction with Fish Creek.
Good luck,
Scott
|