Jason Daoust wrote:I bought the elite 4x at the beginning of last season and got it over a marcum or vex just because I can use for back lakes. I fished with a buddy late last year with a flasher and I would buy the flasher over a finder any day . The finder does have a flasher on it but I would buy the straight flasher over it any day.
Jason like you I also bought mine so I could put it on my Sportspal in the summer. I'm curious if you used the amplitude bar last year when you compared it beside a flasher? I read a post where this guy had a 4x beside some other guys with finders, not flashers, and he was always spotting fish before them using the amp bar.
I'm not knocking flashers at all, I still have an old Lowrance Eagle Silent Sixty-Two with dual depth ranges. It came with a suction cup mount for the summer. The technology is not new at all. But they
are limited in what they can offer. Here's a short list of the options that come with the 4x, starting with dual beam frequencies. It has noise reduction so you can use it around other units, surface clarity, ice mode, depth settings, split flasher mode with a graph, split zoom mode for the graph so you can zoom in on the bottom, different sensitivities and color choices, various ping speeds, etc. so you can tweak it to what you want.... Now, I would rather have an Elite4 or 5 that comes with gps and apps, but the deal was good.
Marko you can check out reviews for the Elite5, same unit, bigger screen. There are also some good ice fishing forums out there, like iceshanty.com.
Any way you go, it will help your fishing for sure, even if it's mostly used for as a depth sounder, as most sonar is anyway. Finding structure/depth is quite often the start of fishing. Marking fish is bonus, then you can refine techniques. Then again, before sonar was used much by most ice fishermen, there were still lots of fish being caught. Look at shoreline structure. Drill a hole, check the depth with a sinker. Walk back till the sinker hits the surface. Works every time, no batteries required lol.
Here's hoping this good cold snap fixes up the poor slush conditions pretty well everywhere it seems. Right now it's not good for any kind of travel, let alone trying to drag a shack out.
Cheers folks... Happy new year of fishing
