1 thing we all have to keep in perspective (especially when dealing with SI images) is the properties of sonar in it's basic form...
Any image that is showing on the screen (2d/DI/SI) is "reflection echo data" of objects in the sound wave "ping" sent thru the water...
Different depths, water clarity, bottom composition, bottom contours, (even unit sensitivity settings) impact the reflection echo data that is processed and plotted into the screen image....
A hard bottom will reflect echos better than a soft bottom...making the image brighter and able to "see"out farther...
Clearer water will allow reflections better than stained water ...(waterborn particles can absorb sound waves)..
An "upsloping bottom" will reflect better than a "downsloping bottom"...
Higher sensitivity settings will allow the reflection data to be "brighter"..
I've seen images that are dark out past 30-40 feet...
I've seen images that are clear out to 70-80-90-100+ ft...
There are other sonar related rudimentary factors involved in the images shown on the screen besides just "which unit/technology/brand/setting gives the best images"....or
Why are "so-n-so's" images better than "so-n-so's"...
Rickie


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