Hi,
I have, without success, tried to get confirmation on my estimates of beam widths for the various Humminbird sidescan transducers. The manuals for the SI 700, 900 and 1100 models tells a lot about beam angels in many directions for many frequencies but NO manual reveals the most important figures for the horizontal beam widths for sideimaging. This is most frustrating and gives a bad feeling that HB has decided not to reveal these specifications. My own estimate is 1.4 degrees at 455 KHz at - 3dB for the transducer for the 981 model. Since this is not very impressive at that frequency I suspect this explains HB's silence. But extremely narrow beam does not need to be the best for fishfinding. Too narrow beam could actually be bad for fishfinding since then the fish could appear as too tiny dots on the screen. Most members of this forum have, I think, other purposes than fishfinding in mind (like wreckhunting) and thus they want the narrowest beam width possible. I think it would be very, very good if HB could sort these is issues out and tell the forum the true figures for beam widths and explain why there might be reasons for not using the narrowest possible beams for fishfinding. Further, I think there is a market for a transducer for the sideimaging units with much better (narrower) beam than those provided by HB today. Actually, since the present tranducers seem to work as fishfinder transducers always have been working (high voltage output from the instrument and no signal processing in the transducer), any reasonably handy person could make his/her own array. A 300 mm array could produce a - 3dB beam, 0.5 degrees wide at 455 KHz. That would be really narrow.
Regards with some frustration... and admiration of HB's products!
Rickard
I have, without success, tried to get confirmation on my estimates of beam widths for the various Humminbird sidescan transducers. The manuals for the SI 700, 900 and 1100 models tells a lot about beam angels in many directions for many frequencies but NO manual reveals the most important figures for the horizontal beam widths for sideimaging. This is most frustrating and gives a bad feeling that HB has decided not to reveal these specifications. My own estimate is 1.4 degrees at 455 KHz at - 3dB for the transducer for the 981 model. Since this is not very impressive at that frequency I suspect this explains HB's silence. But extremely narrow beam does not need to be the best for fishfinding. Too narrow beam could actually be bad for fishfinding since then the fish could appear as too tiny dots on the screen. Most members of this forum have, I think, other purposes than fishfinding in mind (like wreckhunting) and thus they want the narrowest beam width possible. I think it would be very, very good if HB could sort these is issues out and tell the forum the true figures for beam widths and explain why there might be reasons for not using the narrowest possible beams for fishfinding. Further, I think there is a market for a transducer for the sideimaging units with much better (narrower) beam than those provided by HB today. Actually, since the present tranducers seem to work as fishfinder transducers always have been working (high voltage output from the instrument and no signal processing in the transducer), any reasonably handy person could make his/her own array. A 300 mm array could produce a - 3dB beam, 0.5 degrees wide at 455 KHz. That would be really narrow.
Regards with some frustration... and admiration of HB's products!
Rickard
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