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how much does transducer size matter?


howellcanufish

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I am planning on purchasing an fl-18 or lx-3 this winter and I'm curious as to what kind of coverage I will have with the different transducers...what will a 12 degree cover at 10' of water versus 40' of water and so on with the 20 degree? Info on which seems to be a better unit between the vexlar and marcum would also be appreciated.

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Transducer angle tells you how big the cone will be or how much of the bottom you will see. In deep water you want a narrower cone or smaller degree transducer, in shallow water you want a wider or higher degree transducer. 20 degrees is a good compromise for Minnesota waters where you'll probably be fishing 10 - 40 feet most of the time. If undecided I would go with a narrower cone angle - you'll see less of the bottom but in my opinion that's better than having too big of a cone.

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I was told, a transducer reading of the bottom is shaped like the bottom half of a O, the more degrees, the wider the bottom half is, if I understood the man right a fish could be 4 or 5 ft. off the bottom on a wide angle trans. and the vex would show it on the bottom. Sounds fishy to me,but I'm pretty gulliable. crazy.gif

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For that reason alone, Thats why I think a Dual cone angle tranducer 8/20 is the best of both worlds, The narrower 8 dergree is great for walleyes because in a lot of cases you are fishing breaks and the fish are very close to bottom and unwilling to come up in the water column for a bait. And the 20 degree is great for panfish or any suspended fish of the bottom.

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I prefer to have the bigger-angled transducers since I seldom fish more than 30 feet of water and I really just want to know when a fish is in the vicinity (I don't fish breaks much). In fact, I bought a 19 degree transducer for my FL-18 shortly after I purchased it since I didn't feel like I could see fish soon enough with the 12 degree transducer that comes standard with the FL-18 (at least in shallower water).

hope this helps!

dan

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