Geebes 383 wrote:
Awesome thanks for the note! That is a huge help! I will be doing this sometime next week.
You're welcome! One more thing they said was that if you need to move an inch or two in either axis to avoid an obstacle (engine part in the way etc.) that it should still be fine.
After getting the gauge and transducer in yesterday and looking at the transducer (Airmar brand) mounting method, I'm a little concerned. The transducer has a mounting ring (with offset for dead rise angle) that is to be siliconed to the hull and then the transducer itself mounts into that. My concern is that when finally assembled, it appears that the bottom of the transducer will not be in contact with the hull and there will be an air pocket in there as a result. Although this appears to be the way it's designed, everything I've read about transducers so far has indicated air pockets are a no no.
Has anyone used this style transducer and ran across similar concern? The instructions say nothing about filling the base ring cavity with anything, just says to make sure to silicon the ring's edge properly so no water can get inside. I may just give them a call before I put it in for peace of mind.
Edit: Dooh...maybe I need to read directions more carefully. The ring/base gets some boat antifreeze filled in there before inserting the transducer. Step 9 in the directions
