to start off with the gps antenna,from personal experiance,i would go with the external.it is more sensitive,and less likely to lose a signal in inclement weather
Peak-to-Peak
Normally used to describe the output power of a sonar transmitter. This value is a measurement of the total swing of an AC voltage from its peak negative value to its peak positive value.
RMS Literally "root mean square"
A DC voltage that will produce the same heating effect (power output in Watts) as the AC voltage. For a sine wave, the RMS value is equal to 0.707 times the peak value of an AC voltage. Example: divide Peak-to-Peak by 2 (or in half) and multiple by 0.707 = RMS voltage
Now if you take 1500 Watts (Peak to Peak) and divide it by 2 multiply it by 0.707 (Root Mean Square Value), you end up with 530 Watts (RMS). This is indeed a powerful depth finder. Your looking at a depth penetration of about 800'.
Now, I guess you have to ask yourself when was the last time you caught a fish at 800 feet.
The good thing about having all that power is that it will cut thru a lot of debris, specially if you are fishing saltwater or water stirred up after a good rainfall. Another benefit is that it will give you a better detail of the bottom structure (e.g. sand, mud, clay, drop offs, boulders, heavy vegetation). This is the kind of information where you should be taking notes.
Trust me, it will make you a better fisherman. So much time is wasted because not enough attention is paid to the bottom. It comes down to, if you want to catch fish, you have to find them, and to find them you have to know where their habitat is especially at what time of year your fishing.
Another thing you should be looking at is the transducer angle. A 12 degree cone will give you a deep presentation but it is narrow, 20 degrees will give you less penetration but covers a wider area.
So, if your fishing 60 feet of water a narrow cone is pretty well useless to you.
A transducer's cone angle determines its coverage area of the underwater world.
The wider the cone angle, the greater the area that's covered.
Lowrance offers a variety of 200 kHz transducers with either a wide (20°) or narrow (12°) cone angle.
They also offer a variety of 192 kHz transducers with either a wide (20°) or narrow (8°) cone angle.
The 50 kHz transducers come with a 35° cone angle.
Dual-frequency transducers come with both a narrow (12°) 200 kHz and a wide (35°) 50 kHz cone angles and the dual-search transducers come with both a narrow (12°) 200 kHz and a wide
(35°) 83 kHz cone angles.
Generally, use a wide cone angle for fishing shallow to medium depths. The narrow cone penetrates to deeper depths, but shows less fish and structure due to its narrow beam. Remember transducers have to be matched with the transmitter.
What's the difference between wide and narrow cones?
A transducer with a wide cone (50 khz) scans more water and tends to lump things together whether it be
fish, stumps, rocks, etc. A narrow cone (200 khz) can detect small details and focuses on structures at a greater depth. The di
![Sad Sad](https://bigfishtackle.com/forum/images/smilies/sad.png)
vantage here is that it scans a smaller amount of water.
feature a low profile for high speed performance. It's patented design helps prevent cavitation and other interference.
![[Image: 60degree.gif]](http://www.notjustfishing.com/Images/60degree.gif)
To better describe the Skimmer® transducer think about it as your headlight view from your
vehicle at night.
The light beams directly ahead but it also shines off to the side. Now, lets say there are signs one on each side of the road and as you drive closer to them they become increasingly visible. This is termed periphereal. This peripheral is the 20 degree coverage you get on the sonar section of the Lowrance LMS-332C. The sonar covers a 60 degree angle in total. At a depth of about 20' it covers and area about 25'. The deeper the water the more area it covers.
Basically there are two types of transducers a 50 khz and a 200khz.
50 kHz [ul] [li]Deeper depths [li]Wide Cone Angle [li]Less Definition And Target Separation [li]Susceptible To More Noise [/li][/ul]
200kHz [ul] [li]Shallower Depths [li]Narrow Cone Angle [li]Better Definition And Target Separation [li]Less Susceptible To Noise[/li] [li][/li] [li][/li][/ul]
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