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06-19-2013, 12:25 PM | #1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: The 951
Posts: 430
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Reading a Lowrance Elite 4 I apologize now for my noobness.
When I bought my Outback it came with a Lowrance Elite 4. The whole setup is GREAT, however I have some questions reading the bloody thing. I've read the owners manual and even looked at Youtube videos and images. I'm having difficulty figuring out what different things that come on the screen are. When I slide over the kelp I can pretty easily figure that out and the bottom terrain is pretty easy as well as depth ect. I had a dolphin slip under my yak which gave me a pretty clean ping on what a REALLY big solid critter under water looks like but I occasionally get weird blobs floating in the middle of the water column. I'm thinking these could be bait schools? Or am I just kind of wishful thinking? According to everything I've read and seen a "Fish" Should look like a ( turned 90 degrees right? I've seen a little of this but nothing super conclusive. I've never used a fish finder before now and I'm trying not to be a COMPLETE noob but occasionally my noobness comes out. So if anyone has any pics of their fishfinders or videos explaining what's going on it would be exceptionally cool for you to share. This has been an ABSOLUTELY AWESOME forum to learn from!
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I fish therefore I am. Selling cars since 2006. If you love what you do you never WORK a day in your life. |
06-19-2013, 12:37 PM | #2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 1,823
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i always try to drop a sabiki into those blobs.
sometimes its schools of macs, sometimes its schools of sardines, sometimes its schools of the squishies. ya never know until you try. itll also give you a sense of whats in the area. over time its a lot easier to distinguish certain things like kelp, squid, finbait, etc. fishfinders are like women, hard to read, hard to understand, but when they show you the solid curves, its all worth it.
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"Beware the lollipop of mediocrity; lick it once and you’ll suck forever." — Brian Wilson |
06-19-2013, 12:41 PM | #3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: The 951
Posts: 430
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Well put Dan.
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I fish therefore I am. Selling cars since 2006. If you love what you do you never WORK a day in your life. |
06-19-2013, 12:48 PM | #4 |
Emperor
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Buena Park
Posts: 3,649
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Your on the right track, no amount of youtube or pictures will replace OTW experience. there are many variations of fishfinders, transducers...or even how they are mounted, they all will make a difference on how they read. Try to meter known objects, like what you are doing...kelp, dolphins, rocks, sand, bait...and note what they look like. Next time you hook a fish try to get it into your sonar cone and note what it looks like. After time you'll get a sense of what things look like and what they are or likely to be. Hopefully this helps.
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06-19-2013, 12:53 PM | #5 |
MAYNEE-YAK
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: So Cal
Posts: 533
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dolphin mark and seal mark are pretty similar.
a shark the same size gives a diff mark a wsb also gives a diff mark (squigly line... worm.. snake...) a yt gives a very nice arc (especially if you have your chart speed increased) big floating blobs is usually baitball. sometimes too small to hook big floating blobs WITH ARCS under/around them... you want to target those arcs. they are big fish chasing the bait ball.
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