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Sam Matthews May 3rd 04 07:40 PM

How to use a Multi-beam FishFinder
 
Hello all,

I'm new to the world of fish finders. I used a simple one on a couple
of trips, but the more I stared at it the more I realized I had no
idea what it was trying to tell me.

First of all, I coudn't for the life of me understand why everything
was *always moving*. Even when I brought it ice fishing, and put it
on the surface, it showed the bottom as if I was wizzing by in a speed
boat. After many months I realized the mistake I was making.

The temptation with these things (and I hope I'm not the only one) is
to look at the pretty picture, and imagine that - "this is what the
bottom looks like". However, it is not like that at all. It is not a
"snapshot", but is really a graph, a log, a history of signals passing
across the screen.

The new unit I just got (Humminbird 565) has helped me to understand
that. It has, along with the graph, a "flasher" type reading to the
far right. It is easy to tell from this - where the historical
reading is comming from, that which is always panning accross the
screen.

One of the reasons I got this unit is - I do a lot of shallow water
fishing (rarely over 20 feet). I thought this unit would be ideal,
for the wide coverage that it gives. The narrow beam covers 20 deg,
and the wide beam covers 60 deg.

What I am now wondering though is - and the real subject of my post is
- can I really make use of it?

Lets say I'm sitting in 20 ft of water - perfectly still - and
suddenly a fish enters the wide beam of the transducer. Regardless of
where that fish enters the sonar circle, I'm going to see it show up
on the right the screen - and pan left. What do you do - start
casting around like a mad man? Are there any tricks to determining
*where* a fish is?

This unit says that - it will show a fish in the wide beam as a
"hollow" symbol, and those in the narrow beam as a solid symbol. So
at least you have a guess....I guess.

Why is it so hard to show a real-time "snapshot" of what is going on
down there - like a camera. If a fish swims in from the left, you see
it on the left of the screen - not on the right and zoom across. I
understand that if a fish sits directly below the transducer, it will
show up as a black line all accross the screen.

Thanks,
Sam Matthews

Bowgus May 4th 04 12:53 AM

How to use a Multi-beam FishFinder
 
Well ... with my tribeam hummingbird, a hollow fish pointing left is in the
left beam, a hollow fish pointing right is in the right beam, and a solid
fish is directly under the boat. But if you ask me, I think they're just
programmed in to make me think the thing actually works :-)

((((º

·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·.. ((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸((((º
((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸((((º¸.

·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·.. ((((º





Sam Matthews wrote in message
om...
Hello all,

I'm new to the world of fish finders. I used a simple one on a couple
of trips, but the more I stared at it the more I realized I had no
idea what it was trying to tell me.

First of all, I coudn't for the life of me understand why everything
was *always moving*. Even when I brought it ice fishing, and put it
on the surface, it showed the bottom as if I was wizzing by in a speed
boat. After many months I realized the mistake I was making.

The temptation with these things (and I hope I'm not the only one) is
to look at the pretty picture, and imagine that - "this is what the
bottom looks like". However, it is not like that at all. It is not a
"snapshot", but is really a graph, a log, a history of signals passing
across the screen.

The new unit I just got (Humminbird 565) has helped me to understand
that. It has, along with the graph, a "flasher" type reading to the
far right. It is easy to tell from this - where the historical
reading is comming from, that which is always panning accross the
screen.

One of the reasons I got this unit is - I do a lot of shallow water
fishing (rarely over 20 feet). I thought this unit would be ideal,
for the wide coverage that it gives. The narrow beam covers 20 deg,
and the wide beam covers 60 deg.

What I am now wondering though is - and the real subject of my post is
- can I really make use of it?

Lets say I'm sitting in 20 ft of water - perfectly still - and
suddenly a fish enters the wide beam of the transducer. Regardless of
where that fish enters the sonar circle, I'm going to see it show up
on the right the screen - and pan left. What do you do - start
casting around like a mad man? Are there any tricks to determining
*where* a fish is?

This unit says that - it will show a fish in the wide beam as a
"hollow" symbol, and those in the narrow beam as a solid symbol. So
at least you have a guess....I guess.

Why is it so hard to show a real-time "snapshot" of what is going on
down there - like a camera. If a fish swims in from the left, you see
it on the left of the screen - not on the right and zoom across. I
understand that if a fish sits directly below the transducer, it will
show up as a black line all accross the screen.

Thanks,
Sam Matthews




John May 4th 04 05:50 PM

How to use a Multi-beam FishFinder
 
(Sam Matthews) wrote in message . com...
Hello all,

I'm new to the world of fish finders. I used a simple one on a couple
of trips, but the more I stared at it the more I realized I had no
idea what it was trying to tell me.

First of all, I coudn't for the life of me understand why everything
was *always moving*. Even when I brought it ice fishing, and put it
on the surface, it showed the bottom as if I was wizzing by in a speed
boat. After many months I realized the mistake I was making.

The temptation with these things (and I hope I'm not the only one) is
to look at the pretty picture, and imagine that - "this is what the
bottom looks like". However, it is not like that at all. It is not a
"snapshot", but is really a graph, a log, a history of signals passing
across the screen.

The new unit I just got (Humminbird 565) has helped me to understand
that. It has, along with the graph, a "flasher" type reading to the
far right. It is easy to tell from this - where the historical
reading is comming from, that which is always panning accross the
screen.

One of the reasons I got this unit is - I do a lot of shallow water
fishing (rarely over 20 feet). I thought this unit would be ideal,
for the wide coverage that it gives. The narrow beam covers 20 deg,
and the wide beam covers 60 deg.

What I am now wondering though is - and the real subject of my post is
- can I really make use of it?

Lets say I'm sitting in 20 ft of water - perfectly still - and
suddenly a fish enters the wide beam of the transducer. Regardless of
where that fish enters the sonar circle, I'm going to see it show up
on the right the screen - and pan left. What do you do - start
casting around like a mad man? Are there any tricks to determining
*where* a fish is?

This unit says that - it will show a fish in the wide beam as a
"hollow" symbol, and those in the narrow beam as a solid symbol. So
at least you have a guess....I guess.

Why is it so hard to show a real-time "snapshot" of what is going on
down there - like a camera. If a fish swims in from the left, you see
it on the left of the screen - not on the right and zoom across. I
understand that if a fish sits directly below the transducer, it will
show up as a black line all accross the screen.

Thanks,
Sam Matthews


Sam,

Understand that a fish finder can only tell you what's going on under
your boat. Are the fish being taken is only, say, 10 feet of water?
Well your fish finder will help you stay in those waters. If the fish
are feeding on ledges, again, you can identify them. If it's a color
unit you can also identify what kind of bottom it is (flat, irregular,
soft, hard ect), you can also tell by the color if the fish was
directly below (dark red) or off to the side (yellow). In salt water
this also is true for identifying some types of fish from others (fish
with and without swim bladders like Tuna's and sharks). One of the
reasons the unit displays the way it does is so you don't have to
constantly watch it, you can look away and look back and you haven't
missed a thing. Remember, it's just a tool to help you. Give it time
and you'll wonder how you ever lived without one.

William G. Andersen May 7th 04 03:56 AM

How to use a Multi-beam FishFinder
 
I only have a single transducer on my Raytheon L235 and it only detects fish
that are swimming across my path, from right to left.

"Bowgus" wrote in message
ble.rogers.com...
Well ... with my tribeam hummingbird, a hollow fish pointing left is in

the
left beam, a hollow fish pointing right is in the right beam, and a solid
fish is directly under the boat. But if you ask me, I think they're just
programmed in to make me think the thing actually works :-)

((((º

·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·.. ((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸((((º
((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸((((º¸.

·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·.. ((((º





Sam Matthews wrote in message
om...
Hello all,

I'm new to the world of fish finders. I used a simple one on a couple
of trips, but the more I stared at it the more I realized I had no
idea what it was trying to tell me.

First of all, I coudn't for the life of me understand why everything
was *always moving*. Even when I brought it ice fishing, and put it
on the surface, it showed the bottom as if I was wizzing by in a speed
boat. After many months I realized the mistake I was making.

The temptation with these things (and I hope I'm not the only one) is
to look at the pretty picture, and imagine that - "this is what the
bottom looks like". However, it is not like that at all. It is not a
"snapshot", but is really a graph, a log, a history of signals passing
across the screen.

The new unit I just got (Humminbird 565) has helped me to understand
that. It has, along with the graph, a "flasher" type reading to the
far right. It is easy to tell from this - where the historical
reading is comming from, that which is always panning accross the
screen.

One of the reasons I got this unit is - I do a lot of shallow water
fishing (rarely over 20 feet). I thought this unit would be ideal,
for the wide coverage that it gives. The narrow beam covers 20 deg,
and the wide beam covers 60 deg.

What I am now wondering though is - and the real subject of my post is
- can I really make use of it?

Lets say I'm sitting in 20 ft of water - perfectly still - and
suddenly a fish enters the wide beam of the transducer. Regardless of
where that fish enters the sonar circle, I'm going to see it show up
on the right the screen - and pan left. What do you do - start
casting around like a mad man? Are there any tricks to determining
*where* a fish is?

This unit says that - it will show a fish in the wide beam as a
"hollow" symbol, and those in the narrow beam as a solid symbol. So
at least you have a guess....I guess.

Why is it so hard to show a real-time "snapshot" of what is going on
down there - like a camera. If a fish swims in from the left, you see
it on the left of the screen - not on the right and zoom across. I
understand that if a fish sits directly below the transducer, it will
show up as a black line all accross the screen.

Thanks,
Sam Matthews






Dave May 7th 04 08:11 PM

How to use a Multi-beam FishFinder
 
Hi Sam

Have a look at my web site for Sea fishing boats and equipment under Fish
finders
http://fishing_boats.tripod.com/

I have put an article on there which helps explain single and dual
frequencies.

Regards

Dave


"Sam Matthews" wrote in message
om...
Hello all,

I'm new to the world of fish finders. I used a simple one on a couple
of trips, but the more I stared at it the more I realized I had no
idea what it was trying to tell me.

First of all, I coudn't for the life of me understand why everything
was *always moving*. Even when I brought it ice fishing, and put it
on the surface, it showed the bottom as if I was wizzing by in a speed
boat. After many months I realized the mistake I was making.

The temptation with these things (and I hope I'm not the only one) is
to look at the pretty picture, and imagine that - "this is what the
bottom looks like". However, it is not like that at all. It is not a
"snapshot", but is really a graph, a log, a history of signals passing
across the screen.

The new unit I just got (Humminbird 565) has helped me to understand
that. It has, along with the graph, a "flasher" type reading to the
far right. It is easy to tell from this - where the historical
reading is comming from, that which is always panning accross the
screen.

One of the reasons I got this unit is - I do a lot of shallow water
fishing (rarely over 20 feet). I thought this unit would be ideal,
for the wide coverage that it gives. The narrow beam covers 20 deg,
and the wide beam covers 60 deg.

What I am now wondering though is - and the real subject of my post is
- can I really make use of it?

Lets say I'm sitting in 20 ft of water - perfectly still - and
suddenly a fish enters the wide beam of the transducer. Regardless of
where that fish enters the sonar circle, I'm going to see it show up
on the right the screen - and pan left. What do you do - start
casting around like a mad man? Are there any tricks to determining
*where* a fish is?

This unit says that - it will show a fish in the wide beam as a
"hollow" symbol, and those in the narrow beam as a solid symbol. So
at least you have a guess....I guess.

Why is it so hard to show a real-time "snapshot" of what is going on
down there - like a camera. If a fish swims in from the left, you see
it on the left of the screen - not on the right and zoom across. I
understand that if a fish sits directly below the transducer, it will
show up as a black line all accross the screen.

Thanks,
Sam Matthews




Bowgus May 7th 04 11:44 PM

How to use a Multi-beam FishFinder
 
Ok ... so lemme see if I understand ... a single beam fishfinder only
detects fish that swim from left to right. Well that's ok, because on the
way back in, you'll detect the ones you missed on the way out :-)


"William G. Andersen" wrote in message
news:BUCmc.31398$6L3.23140@fed1read05...
I only have a single transducer on my Raytheon L235 and it only detects

fish
that are swimming across my path, from right to left.

"Bowgus" wrote in message
ble.rogers.com...
Well ... with my tribeam hummingbird, a hollow fish pointing left is in

the
left beam, a hollow fish pointing right is in the right beam, and a

solid
fish is directly under the boat. But if you ask me, I think they're just
programmed in to make me think the thing actually works :-)

((((º

·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·.. ((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸((((º
((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸((((º¸.

·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·.. ((((º





Sam Matthews wrote in message
om...
Hello all,

I'm new to the world of fish finders. I used a simple one on a couple
of trips, but the more I stared at it the more I realized I had no
idea what it was trying to tell me.

First of all, I coudn't for the life of me understand why everything
was *always moving*. Even when I brought it ice fishing, and put it
on the surface, it showed the bottom as if I was wizzing by in a speed
boat. After many months I realized the mistake I was making.

The temptation with these things (and I hope I'm not the only one) is
to look at the pretty picture, and imagine that - "this is what the
bottom looks like". However, it is not like that at all. It is not a
"snapshot", but is really a graph, a log, a history of signals passing
across the screen.

The new unit I just got (Humminbird 565) has helped me to understand
that. It has, along with the graph, a "flasher" type reading to the
far right. It is easy to tell from this - where the historical
reading is comming from, that which is always panning accross the
screen.

One of the reasons I got this unit is - I do a lot of shallow water
fishing (rarely over 20 feet). I thought this unit would be ideal,
for the wide coverage that it gives. The narrow beam covers 20 deg,
and the wide beam covers 60 deg.

What I am now wondering though is - and the real subject of my post is
- can I really make use of it?

Lets say I'm sitting in 20 ft of water - perfectly still - and
suddenly a fish enters the wide beam of the transducer. Regardless of
where that fish enters the sonar circle, I'm going to see it show up
on the right the screen - and pan left. What do you do - start
casting around like a mad man? Are there any tricks to determining
*where* a fish is?

This unit says that - it will show a fish in the wide beam as a
"hollow" symbol, and those in the narrow beam as a solid symbol. So
at least you have a guess....I guess.

Why is it so hard to show a real-time "snapshot" of what is going on
down there - like a camera. If a fish swims in from the left, you see
it on the left of the screen - not on the right and zoom across. I
understand that if a fish sits directly below the transducer, it will
show up as a black line all accross the screen.

Thanks,
Sam Matthews









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