Garmin Panoptix livescope forward and down

Lots of different transducers some pretty spendy. This livescope transducer and the black box 1500.00 and wow quite a step up from the ps21 and ps22 transducers. If it stops you from running into something or helps you get threw a shallow channel might be worth looking at.
 
thataway":c26ru4wb said:
Yes, that looks good for fishing, up to 25 feet away in shoal water....but what about real life cruising to avoid obstructions?

That's what we have the old cheap sonar for to find obstructions. You can watch fish in real time look at your bait, see your down rigger ball, & see Halibut creeping along the bottom at your bait.
:roll: not worth it for me yet.
 
How far ahead of your boats bow cab you see? 25 feet out to the side is great, but 25 forward wouldn't be very helpful even at 1 or 2 knots.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon
 
With the PS21 transducer 300 feet forward and 300 feet down. With the Livescope transducer 200 feet forward and 200 feet down. The maximum recommend speed is 9 MPH but they claim if your going faster there wouldn't be enough reaction time to do something. This would be a great device at Lake Powell when there is a little chop on the water and you can't see. There have been times where the water level was just right and there was all kinds of stickups just under the surface just waiting for the outdrive to smack the bottom. The PS21 transducer is $750 but is older technology.
 
Thanks Jody, 300 feet would be nice and useful, especially at my "creeping in at low tide to anchor" speed. Buy the time I am ready, the technology will be updated, and the price will be down. :wink:

Harvey
SleepyC :moon
 
Last winter, I watched a video of a Dashew Yacht going slowly to the head of a uncharted Greenland Fjord to anchor. It was most likely using the older PS 21 transducer as they indicated a 300 foot forward range. The video showing the forward looking sonar in action was extremely impressive & I would love to have the even more improved version on the Hunkydory. If it had been available when we first started our explorations, I would have purchased it & even now very tempting. Maybe not so great for fishing, but for exploring poorly or non charted waters a technical wonder.

Jody, thanks for posting.

Jay
 
Jay,
Thanks for your post.
Without it, I could not have imagined why anyone could need or want this technology, which is by all accounts in its primitive stage.

We all respect your vast experience, thanks again!
John
 
My thoughts are to build a mount for the stearn that would allow me to retract it when moving at speed and motorize it so I can steer it from the helm. I wonder if Garmin will beat me to this. I also thought about mounting it to the bottom of a trim tab. While this would be great for fishing I think I would like it more for avoiding under water hazards.
 
gulfcoast john":2fe3oaxb said:
Jay,
Thanks for your post.
Without it, I could not have imagined why anyone could need or want this technology, which is by all accounts in its primitive stage.

We all respect your vast experience, thanks again!
John

John, thanks for the compliments, but when looking up the Dashew video involving the forward looking sonar use, I found my memory of last winter viewing it somewhat faulty. It was in Canada not Greenland & the head of the Bay was charted. The video does show the forward looking sonar in action & it’s a Simrad forward looking sonar with 200 to 250 feet forward look with clarity not close to the new Garmin, but does show how it can be used. I did watch all the Dashew videos & read all their information on past cruises & capabilities last winter & there are many, so not to surprising the lack of accuracy of my memory & thought corrections warranted. Here is link to video.

http://nixflet.site/fpb-78-1-cochise-us ... QOIQ4.html

Jay
 
Just a few screen shots from the Live Scope.

This is the anchor just going down.

78CA6DFE_DA44_4665_9502_16849317618B.sized.jpg

This is the anchor just touching bottom

513C5944_51E7_4E6F_89D8_F6E3EBEF39FC.sized.jpg

This is retrieving the anchor the next morning.

B4B834AB_DF7F_458B_955F_676E64C12761.sized.png

This is heading straight into the shore.

784B3DA4_80EC_4F14_9A30_BD998A886FFC.sized.jpg
 
Got the new mount for the forward facing sonar made. This one can be raise and lowered as well as turned any direction.

Pano002.jpg
 
Also got the new Livescope mount made this one can be raised or lowered, tilted as well as turned any direction. It will allow me to see down rigger balls the bait and the fish take the bait.

Pano001.jpg
 
That just looks so great. I talked to the guys at Rodger's Marine about doing something like that. They discouraged me from doing it with the Raymarine RV-100 Chirp and down vision 3D.

I can see so much use for that, Like Jody said --> Lake Powell, and tons of really great anchorages where there is 5 feet of water at low tide.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon

0_God_s_Pocket_Anchorage.thumb.jpg
 
hardee":dkldsrye said:
That just looks so great. I talked to the guys at Rodger's Marine about doing something like that. They discouraged me from doing it with the Raymarine RV-100 Chirp and down vision 3D.

And exactly why did they discourage this? I was wondering the same... mounting the rv100 in a similar way and really use at no/low speeds when fishing or anchoring or in unsure waters...
 
Well, #1, It would have taken custom fabrication, which they could do, but it would have taken more time and they had me on a 3 day time slot.
#2. The picture on the screen would not rotate 90 degrees, it would, they said, just present a narrow line, not the wide side scan that I was looking for.
#3. They were concerned that the side presentation of the RV-100 transducer would put too much stress on the the transom attachment and on the transducer itself. Even after assuring them that it would only be deployed transversely at 0-2 or 3 knots. (It is quite long and not so narrow, but the mount is not nearly as robust as the P-66 that was there originally.)

I did send them the link to this thread so they could see the pix, but that came about after I had already set up my schedule and I was already there. Didn't really want to turn around and bring the boat home then back again for it to be later.

For now, the 3D view and the side scan views will work pretty well, but for some spots, I will turn the boat 90 or back into an area if I have to. Many places I anchor I can see the bottom (5-10 foot depths) so the sonar won't be that much of an advantage. Where I can't see, it will be a big plus.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon

0_God_s_Pocket_Anchorage.thumb.jpg
 
hardee":tq6wky3y said:
Well, #1, It would have taken custom fabrication, which they could do, but it would have taken more time and they had me on a 3 day time slot.
#2. The picture on the screen would not rotate 90 degrees, it would, they said, just present a narrow line, not the wide side scan that I was looking for.
#3. They were concerned that the side presentation of the RV-100 transducer would put too much stress on the the transom attachment and on the transducer itself. Even after assuring them that it would only be deployed transversely at 0-2 or 3 knots. (It is quite long and not so narrow, but the mount is not nearly as robust as the P-66 that was there originally.)

I did send them the link to this thread so they could see the pix, but that came about after I had already set up my schedule and I was already there. Didn't really want to turn around and bring the boat home then back again for it to be later.




For now, the 3D view and the side scan views will work pretty well, but for some spots, I will turn the boat 90 or back into an area if I have to. Many places I anchor I can see the bottom (5-10 foot depths) so the sonar won't be that much of an advantage. Where I can't see, it will be a big plus.

Harvey
SleepyC :moon

0_God_s_Pocket_Anchorage.thumb.jpg




Harvey


Turn on the side view and put one motor in forward and one in reverse and rotate the boat on itself. That should give you a 360 degree view of everything around you.
 
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