On Megunticook, w/ Navionics & Humminbird

I finally got the loaner Humminbird 1197c SI installed on Li'l Gizmo, and am pretty darn impressed with its side scanning abilities. But before I get into that, check out that hi res map of my local Lake Megunticook. Yes sirree, Navionics recently updated their Premium and Platinum Hot Maps to include the data I helped collect one crazy day last fall. Frankly, the Megunticook map came out better than I expected. I know how fast the surveyors crisscrossed spots like this, and how far apart their tracks were, but I've sonared a few miles of lake bottom right alongside the new map, and have yet to encounter a serious surprise (though I'm doubting that particular 'HAZARD' warning on the screen above). Going from the old sketch chart to plotting on this level of detail is a giant leap in situational awareness (and possibly fishing success), and adding the side scan view is another big step...
Lots of factors affect the resolution of the side image. Of course, boat speed is one; the faster you go the more bottom you're trying to image with the same number of pixels (and the more it's apt to be fuzzed by prop wash). But the 1197c does let you control chart scroll speed (the faster, the more detail, but less area shown) as well as how far out to show (again, more detail but less coverage). Plus there are sensitivity and sharpness settings, and if you turn much it naturally distorts the image you're creating scan by scan.
At any rate, I did see Lake Megunticook bottom structure much better than I ever have with a conventional fishfinder, and I'm sure something really interesting like an old car (driving on ice can be hazardous ;-) or boat would have stood out nicely. I was also pleasantly surprised by how forgiving the side scanning was about boat pitch and roll, prop wash, and even nearby transducers. But, in fact, the lake bottom is kind of dull (unless you were looking for a lunker bass that might be hanging out under that boulder). Wait until you see how the 1197c can image the mooring blocks and chains in Camden Harbor; it might just blow your mind, as it did the Harbor Master's!


Pull that trailer at night, Ben, you could be arrested for data pollution with all those sensors.