BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   General (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/)
-   -   oxygen sensors for fishing (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/111901-oxygen-sensors-fishing.html)

Tom Francis - SWSports November 24th 09 07:58 PM

oxygen sensors for fishing
 
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 12:08:37 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote:

Does anyone have or use one of these? I have yet to find a good O2 sensor,
but did find a good product called Clinefinder for temperature sensing,
which the reviews tout highly. But the O2 sensors don't rate high, and one
with a 50 or 100 foot cord seems to be spendy, although I haven't found one
yet.


I will say this - outside of lab quality dissolved oxygen sensors,
they ain't worth crap to be honest.

They work on the same principle as the thnigy they put on your finger
in the hospital.

Steve B November 24th 09 08:08 PM

oxygen sensors for fishing
 
Does anyone have or use one of these? I have yet to find a good O2 sensor,
but did find a good product called Clinefinder for temperature sensing,
which the reviews tout highly. But the O2 sensors don't rate high, and one
with a 50 or 100 foot cord seems to be spendy, although I haven't found one
yet.

Steve



Steve B November 25th 09 03:36 AM

oxygen sensors for fishing
 

"Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in
message ...
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 12:08:37 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote:

Does anyone have or use one of these? I have yet to find a good O2
sensor,
but did find a good product called Clinefinder for temperature sensing,
which the reviews tout highly. But the O2 sensors don't rate high, and
one
with a 50 or 100 foot cord seems to be spendy, although I haven't found
one
yet.


I will say this - outside of lab quality dissolved oxygen sensors,
they ain't worth crap to be honest.

They work on the same principle as the thnigy they put on your finger
in the hospital.


I was asking because I have yet to find one associated with fishing that had
any positive user reviews. The best thing was Clinefinder, which will find
a thermocline real fast, and there seems to be a big O2 differential right
at that level. It reads temperature, and not O2. Review of oxygen sensors
on a long string were that they were poorly constructed (one had the battery
door glued shut), or didn't work well at all.

Steve



Tom Francis - SWSports November 25th 09 04:03 AM

oxygen sensors for fishing
 
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:36:06 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote:


"Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in
message ...
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 12:08:37 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote:

Does anyone have or use one of these? I have yet to find a good O2
sensor,
but did find a good product called Clinefinder for temperature sensing,
which the reviews tout highly. But the O2 sensors don't rate high, and
one
with a 50 or 100 foot cord seems to be spendy, although I haven't found
one
yet.


I will say this - outside of lab quality dissolved oxygen sensors,
they ain't worth crap to be honest.

They work on the same principle as the thnigy they put on your finger
in the hospital.


I was asking because I have yet to find one associated with fishing that had
any positive user reviews. The best thing was Clinefinder, which will find
a thermocline real fast, and there seems to be a big O2 differential right
at that level. It reads temperature, and not O2. Review of oxygen sensors
on a long string were that they were poorly constructed (one had the battery
door glued shut), or didn't work well at all.


I owned one for about a week if that means anything to you.

The problem is too much variation in water clarity to make them work
properly.

Not worth the effort.

Steve B November 25th 09 05:31 AM

oxygen sensors for fishing
 

"Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in
message ...
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:36:06 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote:


"Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in
message ...
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 12:08:37 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote:

Does anyone have or use one of these? I have yet to find a good O2
sensor,
but did find a good product called Clinefinder for temperature sensing,
which the reviews tout highly. But the O2 sensors don't rate high, and
one
with a 50 or 100 foot cord seems to be spendy, although I haven't found
one
yet.

I will say this - outside of lab quality dissolved oxygen sensors,
they ain't worth crap to be honest.

They work on the same principle as the thnigy they put on your finger
in the hospital.


I was asking because I have yet to find one associated with fishing that
had
any positive user reviews. The best thing was Clinefinder, which will
find
a thermocline real fast, and there seems to be a big O2 differential right
at that level. It reads temperature, and not O2. Review of oxygen
sensors
on a long string were that they were poorly constructed (one had the
battery
door glued shut), or didn't work well at all.


I owned one for about a week if that means anything to you.

The problem is too much variation in water clarity to make them work
properly.

Not worth the effort.


FYI, upon Googling quite a bit this afternoon, I did discover that a
"Clinefinder" is rated very very highly by anyone who owns one. It is a
device that very accurately reads temperatures. Quite simple, on a reel, a
cord, a weight, a sensor, and an aa battery. At the transition of a
thermocline, there is also a radical transition in oxygen levels, so just
finding a thermocline will put you in an oxygen level striation. The
troubles are two: they are $140 each, and only have 50' cables. People
rating them good was four out of five. Nonetheless, I do believe I will be
getting one for crappie fishing.

Owner reviews for ALL oxygen sensors related to fishing were very low, from
poor quality to big swings in readings. People rating them good were one
out of five.

Steve



Tom Francis - SWSports November 25th 09 01:14 PM

oxygen sensors for fishing
 
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 21:31:05 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote:

FYI, upon Googling quite a bit this afternoon, I did discover that a
"Clinefinder" is rated very very highly by anyone who owns one. It is a
device that very accurately reads temperatures. Quite simple, on a reel, a
cord, a weight, a sensor, and an aa battery. At the transition of a
thermocline, there is also a radical transition in oxygen levels, so just
finding a thermocline will put you in an oxygen level striation. The
troubles are two: they are $140 each, and only have 50' cables. People
rating them good was four out of five. Nonetheless, I do believe I will be
getting one for crappie fishing.


I trust my Raymarine DS-600 to find thermoclines - in comparing
results against a temperature probe (I have a mechanical thermometer
on old broken rod and spinning reel), I find it's very accurate by
comparison.

Owner reviews for ALL oxygen sensors related to fishing were very low, from
poor quality to big swings in readings. People rating them good were one


Agreed and from personal experience, they suck. :)

Richard Casady November 27th 09 01:34 PM

oxygen sensors for fishing
 
On Tue, 24 Nov 2009 14:58:00 -0500, Tom Francis - SWSports
wrote:

I will say this - outside of lab quality dissolved oxygen sensors,
they ain't worth crap to be honest.

They work on the same principle as the thnigy they put on your finger
in the hospital.


Horse****. The one in the hospital looks at the color of the
hemoglobin. **** all to do with dissolved anything.

Casady


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:30 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com