Lowrance 000-11145-001 Elite-5 HDI Combo with Basemap and 83/200-455/800 KHz Transducer (Discontinued by Manufacturer)
- 5″ 480×480 pixel color LCD
- Chart plotter with basemap, accepts optional Navionics Gold cartography
- Hybrid Dual Imaging Broadband sounder with DownScan Imaging
- Easy to use tilt/swivel bracket
- Includes transom mount transducer
Lowrance Elite-5 HDI Combo with Basemap & 83/200-455/800KHz Transducer. The Elite-5 Chart plotter/Fishfinder features a brilliant 5 in., 480×480 pixel SolarMAX 256-color TFT display has unmatched screen brightness, contrast, resolution and viewing detail at wider angles and in bright sunlight. Adjustable screen and keypad backlight improves usability and visibility day or night. Hybrid Dual Imaging combines the power of a conventional 300 Watt Broadband Sounder with the high-resolution imagery of DownScan Imaging, providing easy-to-understand, picture-like detail of bait fish, predator fish and bottom structure. The images can be viewed side-by-side or can be overlaid to unprecedented show detail. The internal 16-channel GPS antenna provide
Marine Gps Chartplotter And Fishfinder
Dennis R
December 5, 2015Great product,
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LSUMurse
December 5, 2015Chartplotting ability is limited,
My issue with the unit (had I known it was not capable I would have bought something else) is the limitations of the chartplotter. It does a decent job of locating and giving a true location, but the base map is almost useless. There are spots where it shows the name of the waterway, but the map shows dry land. I tried upgrading and bought the Insight chip by Lowrance which was equally useless. It made zero difference in mapping the Louisiana marsh. I ended up buying the Navionics chip for the south and that has made the unit useable. It’s still not a nice map like a Google Maps or something like that and it doesn’t have all the small canals and bays, but it is certainly a step up.
Overall I gave it a 4 because it would still be a nice unit for someone that fishes mostly lakes and large bays. As long as you’re not going into intricate bayous, canals, and marshes, you should be alright.
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