| How Fishfinders find Fish | |
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How Sonar Works [ Top 10
Fishfinder Questions ] [ What
the Professionals Say ] [ Our
Range of Fishin Buddy FishFinders ] |
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How
Sonar Works > top Conventional bottom-finding sonar uses a transducer to send ultrasonic sound waves, or pings, down through water. The pings bounce off the bottom, and objects such as fish, and are received back by the same transducer. A sonar ping travels at a rate of approximately four thousand eight hundred feet per second. The Unit can monitor the time it takes for each ping to go out and come back, and accurately calculate the distance to underwater objects. Once the distance is determined, it can be plotted on a screen, one ping at a time, to draw a historical picture of the bottom contour, and the location of fish and other objects that pass under your boat. |
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How
Sidefinding Works > top Bottom Line Sidefinders are also set to ignore fish smaller than seven inches, to avoid scattered baitfish clutter. Sidefinder's transducer emits a narrow nine degree cone to pinpoint the location of fish—meaning that when you see a fish on the screen, you know it is directly where your sidefinder is looking. |
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Sidefinding
Technology > top Directing sound pulses sideways results in
echoes from the underside of waves and from the bottom (especially in
shallow water). Bottom Line pioneered and patented the technology needed
to separate the echoes returned from fish and those returning from the
water's surface and the lake bottom. A considerable amount of sophisticated
filtering is required. A Sidefinder with trolling motor mounted transducer can sweep the area 360 degrees around your boat for fish. When sweeping a circle around your boat, rotate the transducer slowly to give the unit time to work. The slower you move the transducer, the more time the Sidefinder has to pick out the fish echoes. |
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Coverage
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Sees
Under Structure > top |
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Sees
Like a Flashlight > top |
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Side
Lobes > top |
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Multiple
Cones > top The Bottom Line Tournament Leader S.F. shows two views; one down... and one to the side. The Tournament Leader S.F. Three shows as many as three views using Bottom Line's new single-body transducer. You can see fish to the right... to the left... and down, all at the same time. The Tournament Master S.F. Three shows up to three views using Bottom Line's new single-body transducer. You can see fish to the right... to the left... and down, all at the same time. Bottom Line's state-of-the-art, Tournament Champion, shows fish in up to five directions at once... two out to the side... two at forty-five degree angles... and one looking down. |
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| Display
Reading > top The importance of seeing fish as perfect boomerang-shaped arches on the screen has greatly exaggerated over the years. It all has to do with how fish arches are created. Imagine sitting in an anchored boat with your fishfinder turned on. Picture in your mind the transducer's cone-shaped scanning area under your boat. In order to print as a perfect arch, a fish will have to enter the edge of the cone, swim directly through the middle, and exit the cone. Let's say the fish holds a constant depth of 15 feet as he swims straight through the cone. The fishfinder measures the distance to the fish and starts to show it on the display. As the fish enters the cone, it is 15 feet directly below the surface of the water, but because of the angle, probably about 16 feet from the transducer. As the fish swims through the center of the cone, it passes directly below the transducer (15 feet). When it reaches the edge of the cone again, it's 16 feet away just before it stops show on the screen. This causes an arch to show on the screen—starting at 16 feet, curving up to 15 feet, then curving back down to 16 feet. The wider the cone angle, the more exaggerated the arch. If the fish changes depth, passes through only the edge of the cone, or wanders around under the boat before swimming off, it won't show as a perfect arch. |
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