You may ask yourself - what do small fish look like on sonar? It is not an easy answer. Sonar determines size as echo strength and displays echo strength as different colors and how thick the fish arch is. Echo strength is different from targets at 5 feet or 20 feet from the transducer because sound get weaker as it travels through water. This is why auto sensitivity turns the sensitivity higher in deeper water. I have some examples of perch on this tutorial.
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Fish like rocks and one of my favorite fish to catch likes boulders (Smallmouth Bass). After we figure out the fish are relating to boulders, we need to find more spots with rocks and boulders so we have more choices. Maps help because if the best rocks are at 15 feet, we can find 15 foot spots on the maps. You must have high definition map cards (Navionics, LakeMaster and Lowrance Insight Pro/HD) to have accurate 15 foot depth contours.
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Why does my screen show vertical lines on it when I turn on my other sonar unit or when someone is fishing near my boat? When two sonar units are sending sound at the same frequency you can get crosstalk. Each transducer is sending (pinging) and receiving sound. Sometimes one sonar unit will display the other sonar units pings sonar and you will see vertical lines. Since the cone shape of the sound from a transducer gets larger as it goes deeper you get more overlap of cones in deep water. In shallow water you get less or no crosstalk.
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You find fish at 20 mph with old flashers, Lowrance LCX/LMS models and the new HDS models.
The first images shows fish with the LCX from 2007. I would tweak the setting to get these images by using the maximum ping speed, slightly increase the Colorline and manual sensitivity and use the blue background palette. Finding fish at high boat speeds was difficult to unless I tweaked the settings.
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If you see lines coming from the bottom to almost the surface at an angle, they are air bubbles. Notice the speed of 0.4 mph, I rarely see bubbles unless I am moving slowly. It is easy to confirm on calm days by watching the water surface for the bubbles.
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It swims, hops, wiggles, sinks, snaps, and twitches to attract fish. A jig does about everything except jump tall buildings and fly. A vertical presentation is only one of your choices to catch walleyes-I have many vertical jigging tips for catching walleye. Vertical jigging is a technique where the boat is stationary or moving slowly. Boat control is very important for this method because you must move slowly to stay vertical. Always watch others jig as there are many variations of each presentation. Practice and use what works for you, but always try to match the jig action of the angler who is catching the most fish.
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What are they and how big are they?
We want sonar to give us the answers to these questions but it isn’t easy. You must know the location, type of fish in your system, and how to determine size with sonar.
Sonar only gives you the echo strength of the target and displays it-it won't make identifying fish and their size with sonar easy. Sensitivity can change the echo strength and depth range changes the way the fish are displayed (fish in a 10 foot scale are larger than fish on a 100 foot scale).
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High Tech electronics and family fishing doesn’t sound right but it works-you really can learn how to use sonar with your kids to catch fish!
I had my grandchildren out fishing and we were catching panfish (bream for the southerners) in the weeds with leeches and wax worms and I noticed these fish on the sonar.
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Determining size of fish is difficult with sonar - but surely, you want to know what big fish look like on sonar. This image shows big fish I was targeting this day and this is what I would see on the sonar. Notice the DownScan and the traditional sonar show a thick band and this is the best way to tell size.
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We rarely see fish on drop-offs because the closest “bottom” to the transducer is the drop-off, so the fish are not displayed. Sonar displays the echo strength of the target and the distance the target is from the transducer. The first example has the fish a farther distance from the transducer than the bottom so the fish echo is added to the “bottom“ echo and not seen. The “bottom” under the transducer is 25 ft, fish at 23 ft, and the drop off “bottom” is 20 ft. Now visualize what the sonar will show you. The picture is my rough drawing so it is not to scale; it is just to get you thinking.
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