Selecting the very best Fish Finder for Your Boat

March 29, 2010 by  

HTML clipboardHaving grown up around the New Jersey shore I’ve fond stories of spending long summer days on the Barnegat Bay fishing or sailing with good friends. I also have memories of coming home late and needing to explain I’d lost tabs on distance on the water and gone too far south. Anyone who spent their childhood years on the water can appreciate the challenge of getting my mother and father to believe me though it happened over and over again.
 
 Needless to say, there’s no room for such a poor excuse nowadays with the available Garmin Marine GPS devices that happen to be in the marketplace. While we were certainly not beyond sight of land in the bay, you nevertheless could lose track of the length of time you may have drifted when doing some fishing. This problem of distance is magnified if you were required to sail back against the wind. With the new Garmin Marine GPS devices you are able to pinpoint your actual location within seconds.
 
 An additional excellent marine electronics device which I would like to have had when young was a good fish finder. Although we got very good figuring out where the fish would hide, our abilities simply could not match up against the newest fish finders in the marketplace.
 
 A friend recently exposed me to the convenience of using an electronic fish finder. He favored the Humminbird fish finder units which are available in a number of different designs and styles.  They vary from somewhat inexpensive simple fish finders to more state-of-the-art chart plotters. I remember trying out similar devices many years ago when they were first presented to the market and they were pricey as well as occasionally very difficult to understand. That’s not true considering the modern electronics.
 
 Another fascinating product is the Lowrance fish finder. Needless to say anyone who has ever been around the water is familiar with the Lowrance brand. You can find their name dressing many a radar mast on the expensive yachts in the marina. But the Lowrance fish finder is not only inexpensive but very practical. Just like other brand names, they feature numerous types of products and you really are just restricted by your budget and fishing needs.
 
 For those who have been away from the water for virtually any length of time as I had been, you really should take some time to check out the big variety of marine electronics that not just will add to your boating pleasure but also can contribute to your basic safety on the water.

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5 Responses to “Selecting the very best Fish Finder for Your Boat”

  1. high on April 8th, 2010 6:52 pm

    you can do what the person above sed and write it under your battery or you can get the motherboard informmation and if it gets stolen the police can hack it and block the computer

  2. lavink brot on May 1st, 2010 3:48 pm

    LOL

  3. orlans longshew on June 10th, 2010 1:10 pm

    good stuff; should help a lot of new users.

  4. Twitter on November 6th, 2010 3:57 am

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  5. William deCamp on December 22nd, 2010 10:24 am

    The Oyster Creek nuclear plant strains 1.7 billion gallons of Barnegat Bay water of life per day. In total Barnegat Bay holds 60 billion gallons. Thus, each day Oyster Creek strains of life a volume of water equivalent to 2.8% of the volume of Barnegat Bay. That is over 1000% of the volume of the bay per year. Consider also that the water in Barnegat Bay has an extremely long residency time — by the lower estimates about 50 days. I have just described ecocide. The Clean Water Act permit that allowed this expired eleven years ago in 1998.

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