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Even at that depth I get better separation looking at Mackerel than what’s shown as whitefish in the picture. |
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That depends on a few factors, that are interrelated. But it comes down to the number of fish and their vertical distribution in the area of view. In these cases, I am on 83khz (my wide cone angle frequency). That gives me a better angle to capture something, but it also jams all of that info into each vertical line the FF draws. As long as the fish are fairly thick and well distributed vertically, they can blot out the screen. Quote:
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Straight line across the bottom is my downrigger ball and camera setup. Quote:
This last mark was a Dolphin passing by the camera. Ok, here is an easy one. |
I believe the last ones are called "What are boner fish for $500 Alex?"
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Yellowtail tunas |
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Those kind of worms, I love to see on my FF screen. It's been a while, but it just reminds me to keep doing out.
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Here is one last one that is pretty kewl to figure out everything that is going on in. And how things change at a distance. |
School of bass with one following a lure up to the yak?
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I got one for you boys. Very grainy. Still a good one. |
Help please
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One thing is for sure, I’ll never know what they really were. Safe bet would be yellows.:doh: please don’t jack my spots
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The last pic is "worms". That is a 35lb worm rising to the surface at the end of the fight.
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I am going to go with YT on Denis Ruso pic. (because of the quick 10' descent in the middle of the pic and the depth changes on the last high arch).
I am going with school of Bonito or smaller grade YT on the bottom pic from TJones (at that depth I would expect to see more solid and hard returns from anything larger). Although they could be nicer fish that just never made it into the main cone angle? Not sure about the top pics though, not much information there. |
Thanks for the thread!
I really enjoyed this thread. It helps a newbie like me improve my ability to read the FF. Thanks!
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A hooked 35 LB worm? You really had the drag buttoned down. Hahaha |
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I see what you mean by descent but keep in mind that a FF signal is a cone. Therefore it may look like they're descending but they're just getting further from the signal or turning. Also the thickness of the marks is signature of WSB because of their air bladder I believe. Also note the depth is 50' and kelp. I guess a hint would have helped that it's in Malibu. |
Lowrance Settings
Definitely an interesting thread. I'm not sure I'm getting the most out of may fancy Lowrance sonar unit though. Anybody care to share settings that work well for LJ?
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Which unit do you have? Which transducer? I’d try running your gain/sensitivity around high 70’s to 80’s. Colorline about the same maybe a little less. Turn off surface clarity and noise rejection. Play around with it a little. Drop a heavy jig while you’re drifting and see how long you can watch it on your screen. If you don’t see it for very long, start turning up the gain. You might get a little clutter or feedback from other transducers in the area, but that’s ok. You will also see more fish. The goal is to have the gain up just high enough to still be able to see what’s going on but not so high that you can’t see through it. Run over the kelp beds and note how that looks. Softer bottom and softer returns will look reddish/purple, solid or harder returns will look more yellowish. Once you have it dialed it, you should only need to make very minor adjustments from there. Good luck and report back. |
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The entire screen there is less than 3 minutes of duration. So the WSB rising is about the last 1.5 minutes of around a 7 minute fight ("at the end of the fight"). Quote:
Even on the widest of cone angles, you would not see that type of range change from your transducer at those depths without vertical movement. Turning will make no change for your FF, only distance from the transducer. Thickness of the mark is based on how much (vertically) of the object returns a signal. The two signatures of WSB are the color (strength of signal) and elongated marks with not much vertical movement (worm like). Although color can be the most difficult to interpret based on distance, thickness can be quite interesting too (just look at my last pic again, that is the same fish at the bottom as at the top). Quote:
At that depth scale, and with the fish between 15 and 35' away, it would be hard to guess the species, but easy to tell that they were large. Especially not knowing how you have your sensitivity and colorline set. Quote:
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Interesting so do you have your scroll speed turned down to less than normal speed? I feel like if my unit is set to normal that mark would be long gone off the screen during that duration. |
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