I was always told that a sonar unit can't read past a solid object, so it shows it on the screen as such (as in the case of the limbs/branches). But, a fish is mostly water ... and their air bladder is the only thing that the signal doesn't penetrate, so it's what the unit shows.
It might also have something to do with distance ... as in how far away the fish is, in relation to the transducer. Remember, you're looking at a fairly large section of the underwater world, and it's being displayed on a tiny screen (in comparison). That little "speck" has to be compared with the size of something that it's right next to, in order to really know its relative size. And since ALL the units are simply measuring distance (signal time to/from the reflecting object), in ALL the confines of whatever shape/size of their cone angle, and compressing that info into a "picture" on your screen ... it's going to be pretty hard to determine exactly whether or not that fish is "right next to" or "just in the general area of" something that you can compare it to, in order to determine "size".
... cp![]()


Likes:
Thanks:
HaHa: 
Reply With Quote


















