Good article on ice sonars

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Dewey
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Good article on ice sonars

Unread postby Dewey » Wed Feb 08, 2017 1:47 pm

Ice Sonar FAQs For Beginners And Experts
By Joel Nelson - February 6, 2017

Think you know your ice electronics? Even if you're a seasoned veteran of the sonar world, here are some bits of advice that can help!

Every year, a new set of anglers both young and old, learn to use ice fishing sonar or flashers for the first time. That said, I encounter many anglers on the ice each year that still have their ice sonar on default factory settings from when they bought the unit 10 years ago. Whether you're brand new to the game, or it's old-hat, here are some answers to age old questions and some new ones to keep it interesting.

How far down should I drop my transducer?

Conventional wisdom has it that for the best reading, you should put the bottom of your transducer just below the ice in the center of the hole. This ensures that your jig falls into the conic beam (cone angle) that forms at the transducer and fans out radially in expanding width the deeper you go. Practically speaking however, you want your ducer off to one side of the hole, and a bit up into the hole while still maintaining a clear reading. Too far below the bottom of the ice and centered in the hole, you're asking a fish to tangle in the transducer cord.

How deep is it?

While most people really want to know at what depth they're fishing, rarely does it matter. This is because now with a flasher, all of your depths will be relative anyway. You'll see your bait and its location in relation to the bottom. Move to shallower and deeper water, your frame of reference will still be scaled by your bait and its location to the bottom and possibly fish.

Why don't I see my jig?

There can be any number of reasons, from improper depth range, to low gain setting, to the transducer being too far to one side of the hole and not pointed straight down.

How high should I turn my gain or sensitivity?

The rule of thumb here is to turn it up and down, until you find the point where your jig just barely appears as a solid, crisp target, threatening to disappear. Too high and you're picking up unwanted signals from the rest of the water column. Too low, and you can't see your jig in relation to the fish that are after it.

Why don't I see my jig until I'm a few feet below the transducer?

Directly below the transducer represents the smallest portion of the cone angle, specifically, the tip of the cone. For you to achieve a reading here, you'd need to place it directly inside of this small area, and rarely to we drop it directly below the ‘ducer. The further below the transducer you are, the more likely your bait is to be within the cone angle.

Why can I drop my bait "below" the bottom?

To better understand sonar, you need to mentally grasp the footprint of your sonar cone, right where it makes contact with bottom. We all know that the lake bottom isn't flat as a pancake, so it stands to reason that one edge of your cone angle may be sounding at 15 feet, while the other edge may be in 18 feet of water. The steeper the break (tighter the contours) you're fishing, the more accentuated this effect is. The return you see on your screen shows the shallowest portion of the cone, meaning that you can appear to drop your bait below bottom. One of the best ways to counter this effect is to switch to a narrower beam or cone angle when fishing steep slopes. You can also zoom into bottom if that's the primary zone you're fishing, giving you a better view of that specific area.

When should I use zoom?

As far as I'm concerned, that zoom button should be locked in the "on" position for most angling situations. With digital sonar technology, zoom means more than a magnifying glass on the strike zone, it actually enhances the ability of the sonar engine to send, receive, and display minute differences in targets. It's the detail you can see when a gill flares its fins before a strike, when picking out sizes of crappies suspended down 20 feet in 50 feet of water, and when fishing belly-to-bottom walleyes that just barely flicker to reveal their presence at the outside edge of the cone angle. Get used to running your sonar in the zoom mode no matter what depth you're fishing and for what species.

How do I get "better" with my ice sonar?

While practice makes perfect, make sure to practice with a purpose. If you have access to an underwater camera, the very best thing you can do is to study your lure and a fish's reaction to it both on the camera and sonar simultaneously. While it is becoming increasingly easier to tote lightweight and portable cameras around ice, your sonar becomes a much more efficient tool when you realize what subtle movements your bait and the fish that are relating to it can mean. Simple concepts like the swing of your jigging stroke become much more apparent when you can translate the real view (camera) to a representation of it (sonar). In deep water, while your target appears to move a very small amount on sonar, your pull may be an actual 3 feet.

Your ice sonar is a great tool to help make you a better angler, but only if you take the time to learn how to use it properly. We can pound a nail with nearly all sides of a hammer, but one way works markedly better than the others.


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Crazinamatese
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Re: Good article on ice sonars

Unread postby Crazinamatese » Wed Feb 08, 2017 2:42 pm

Those are great tips. I been having issues lately with fish pulling my line around the transducer cord when pulling them up. Its a pain to deal with most of the time. Bluegills especially. They tend to spin around sideways when you reel them in. Crappies not so much. Im beginning to get used to pulling the transducer out of the hole when I hook one.
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Re: Good article on ice sonars

Unread postby Jonny » Thu Feb 09, 2017 8:29 am

Crazinamatese wrote:Those are great tips. I been having issues lately with fish pulling my line around the transducer cord when pulling them up. Its a pain to deal with most of the time. Bluegills especially. They tend to spin around sideways when you reel them in. Crappies not so much. Im beginning to get used to pulling the transducer out of the hole when I hook one.


Yeah that is my biggest pet peeve with locators is the cable. Lost many nice fish the last few years because of it. No matter how fast you can get it out of the water, you still get a couple every day that wrap around it. Sit on top of the hole, use a short rod, and be ready to grab it.

Whitebass are exactly like bluegills. Just bigger and pull harder but they just do donuts the entire time in the hole. Never can have one of those fall off but once you hook that big crappie or walleye, all of a sudden you lose those like nobodies business.

My locator and I have a love hate relationship. Some days I love it, and other days I am ready to drown it.
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