Texasmark
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2005
- Messages
- 14,795
I hadn't been on a certain lake for half a dozen years. My outing Friday was on that lake. So I tooled around to see what changed making full use of the 2 ea 4" $99 free shipping, Hummingbird, color, sonar sets. One transducer was epoxied to the hull with JB Weld, right at the transom, inside the boat, and the other was under my bow seat where I run my ™ also attached with JB to the aluminum hull......reasoning is Sonar is sound transfer and metal is a perfect sound reproducer, so why not put it in your glue too. Sensitivity was set at 5 of 10 and was right for what I was doing. Just a little background info.
Surface water temp was 51 in the early AM and by early PM when I left it had moved up to 53. We had had several days of 30F lows with the fronts coming through.
Across my screen at 3 feet, on both scopes, was a blue line roughly 3-4 inches, scaling from the 3' depth and it followed me around in water above 3' and up to 16' while in protected water, the max depth there. When I moved out into open water, 24' max depth, it disappeared. Assuming that in open water, it means wind and waves and surface disturbances as you all know so I guess it dispersed the transition layer.
Bottom line, anybody have the their Sonar pick up a thermocline before?
Surface water temp was 51 in the early AM and by early PM when I left it had moved up to 53. We had had several days of 30F lows with the fronts coming through.
Across my screen at 3 feet, on both scopes, was a blue line roughly 3-4 inches, scaling from the 3' depth and it followed me around in water above 3' and up to 16' while in protected water, the max depth there. When I moved out into open water, 24' max depth, it disappeared. Assuming that in open water, it means wind and waves and surface disturbances as you all know so I guess it dispersed the transition layer.
Bottom line, anybody have the their Sonar pick up a thermocline before?