Bruce — if you’re going to have two depth transducers running at the same time,
you’d better check to make sure they’re running on different frequencies;
otherwise, you’re going to experience some strange results…
— Fred
Fred Street -- Minneapolis
S/V Oceanis (1979 C Landfall 38) -- on the
Hi Bruce
Shouldn't be cored along the center line. You can tell where there is / isn't
core, there is a noticeable step within the inside of the hull where it goes
from core to no core. E.G. check around thru-hull fittings, there should be no
core in that location so nearby there will be the
First of all, at the risk of sounding like a 'do as I say don't do as I do' kind of guy. I'm just thinking, well, if this is one of those transducers that can actually show you the image of a ship on the bottom, it might lose some of that fine detail going through a fiberglass hull. Why don't you
that is used to seal the toilets), or you can be
brave and epoxy the transducer to the hull permanently.
Good luck
Marek
1994 C270 ”Legato”
Ottawa, ON
From: CnC-List On Behalf Of bwhitmore via
CnC-List
Sent: 18 May, 2019 19:25
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Cc: bwhitmore
Subject: Stus-List Cored hull
Hello all,I bought a Garmin Echomap Plus 94SV and transducer that is on sale at
West Marine. This comes with a good transducer that will map out the bottom,
act as a fish finder, etc. On most boats, the transducer can be mounted in
the bilge and will fire through the fiberglass