chewi
Well-Known Member
They do radiate the cone outwards, I can't remember what the typical values are but, of course, in shallow water it's still not going to have much of an effect so won't be much more than straight down in reality.
It was only a few weeks back that I had to take a boat into a local boat club located right up in the saltings of the Medway, somewhere I'd never been before.
A large expanse of featureless water around 2' deep with a winding channel leading through it, very narrow but with around 5' of water in the gulley at high tide.
The chap I was with seemed very impressed at my ditch crawling prowess when we reached the club, but I have to admit that there was no skill involved, just (very slowly) following the channel on the plotter and tracking it on the fishfinder!
I've no doubt it would have been as straightforward with a depth sounder, but it was extremely helpful to be able to see the sides of the gulley coming up if we drifted slightly off course.
I have to point out that I'm new to boating in general, and a more experienced navigator would probably have had no qualms about finding their way in, but I found it invaluable to be able to see if a rapid change in depth was the gulley we were following or just an obstruction or a hole.
My Garmin has an alarm , and a second alarm via the plotter, so I don't take much notice until it wakes me up.
I use the first as a heads up at 2.0m in case I am distracted and dont realise I'm heading into shallows ( I draw 1.1m)
The second is at 1.2m, and I watch it like a hawk after that.
I've never used it for finding fish, they can stay where they belong!