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#1
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I am about to purchase a Lowrance LMS 522C GPS/Fishfinder. Looking for
some pros/cons to mounting the transducer on the transom vs a thru hull mount. Drilling holes through the hull may be the way to go, but not without accelerating the heart rate. Matt |
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On Apr 6, 8:49 am, "matt" wrote:
I am about to purchase a Lowrance LMS 522C GPS/Fishfinder. Looking for some pros/cons to mounting the transducer on the transom vs a thru hull mount. Drilling holes through the hull may be the way to go, but not without accelerating the heart rate. Matt I am a Garmin dealer, with not a whole lot of experience doing this..... but, Garmin says that either mounting method is reliable if your hull isn't too thick. I chose to mount Transom to try to avoid interferance.... however you do have to consider Prop feedback. What sort of boat are you mounting to? They tell me that boats with an inboard may need a little more padding to avoid vibration.... but I'm not so sure. I have been on many a shaky outboards. Once you commit to the transom mount... plan it out carfully, read all the instructions and you can drill that hole with confidence. The heart palpatations go away after that first drill bit pokes through... theres no turning back! However, Through the hull has many advantages over transom mounting.... many! Fewer holes is one, but there is no transducer to watch (or wreck) for when trailering your boat. In hull won't corode up in sal****er. Also the transducer won't come loose and "flip" up at an odd angle. Transom does give you a clearer signal though... so there many pros and cons.... but the better models aren't really affected or stifled much by the hull. |
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On Apr 6, 6:00 pm, "Sprattoo" wrote:
I am a Garmin dealer, with not a whole lot of experience doing this..... but, Garmin says that either mounting method is reliable if your hull isn't too thick. I chose to mount Transom to try to avoid interferance.... however you do have to consider Prop feedback. What sort of boat are you mounting to? They tell me that boats with an inboard may need a little more padding to avoid vibration.... but I'm not so sure. I have been on many a shaky outboards. Once you commit to the transom mount... plan it out carfully, read all the instructions and you can drill that hole with confidence. The heart palpatations go away after that first drill bit pokes through... theres no turning back! However, Through the hull has many advantages over transom mounting.... many! Fewer holes is one, but there is no transducer to watch (or wreck) for when trailering your boat. In hull won't corode up in sal****er. Also the transducer won't come loose and "flip" up at an odd angle. Transom does give you a clearer signal though... so there many pros and cons.... but the better models aren't really affected or stifled much by the hull. I am mounting to a Sea Ray 215 EC. I purchased the unit with the transom mount, so I will be drilling a 1" hole in the transom. Read all of the instructions, a few times. Sounds like the only thing I really need to watch out for is routing the cable so it does not pick up any interference from existing wiring. Not really sure how much flexibility I am going to have with the routing. None of this rigging is going to happen until it stops snowing here in Michigan. Matt |
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On Apr 6, 7:49 am, "matt" wrote:
I am about to purchase a Lowrance LMS 522C GPS/Fishfinder. Looking for some pros/cons to mounting the transducer on the transom vs a thru hull mount. Drilling holes through the hull may be the way to go, but not without accelerating the heart rate. Matt You should call Lowrance headquarters here in Tulsa. They are great people, and will gladly help you make an informed decision. If you are anywhere near Tulsa, drop by the place and they will show you more than you could ever imagine. |
#5
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![]() "matt" wrote in message ups.com... On Apr 6, 6:00 pm, "Sprattoo" wrote: I am a Garmin dealer, with not a whole lot of experience doing this..... but, Garmin says that either mounting method is reliable if your hull isn't too thick. I chose to mount Transom to try to avoid interferance.... however you do have to consider Prop feedback. What sort of boat are you mounting to? They tell me that boats with an inboard may need a little more padding to avoid vibration.... but I'm not so sure. I have been on many a shaky outboards. Once you commit to the transom mount... plan it out carfully, read all the instructions and you can drill that hole with confidence. The heart palpatations go away after that first drill bit pokes through... theres no turning back! However, Through the hull has many advantages over transom mounting.... many! Fewer holes is one, but there is no transducer to watch (or wreck) for when trailering your boat. In hull won't corode up in sal****er. Also the transducer won't come loose and "flip" up at an odd angle. Transom does give you a clearer signal though... so there many pros and cons.... but the better models aren't really affected or stifled much by the hull. I am mounting to a Sea Ray 215 EC. I purchased the unit with the transom mount, so I will be drilling a 1" hole in the transom. Read all of the instructions, a few times. Sounds like the only thing I really need to watch out for is routing the cable so it does not pick up any interference from existing wiring. Not really sure how much flexibility I am going to have with the routing. None of this rigging is going to happen until it stops snowing here in Michigan. Matt Matt, I have the 522C IGPS and it seems like a good unit so far. I think your Sea Ray has a fiberglass hull. I had a WebbCraft years ago with an I/O and just epoxied the transducer to the hull just forward of the engine. You need to find a place where the hull is just one layer, as in, no sub-floor. A thru-hull transducer will shoot through the fiberglass hull with no problems and mine never lost the bottom even at high speeds. On the transom mount transducer, why do you have to drill a 1" hole? I have mine mounted to an aluminum boat and just used two self-drilling metal screws. you could do the same, but I'd drill small pilot holes and regular metal screws. Put a dub of silicone sealer on each screw/hole. |
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