Hello,
first post ever on this forum!
I'm from Ottawa and I fish on Lake Ontario and the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron.
I've been using the MOOR SUBTROL
http://www.moorelectronics.com/fishing/fishing.html
for many years and would not ever fish without it. There are wicked currents in lake O. as Niagara Falls enter at the west end and the lake exits in the St-Lawrence river to the east.
Before I had the speed and temp reader, I remember sometimes we would would troll and get fish only going on a east to west troll, and then nothing on a west to east troll... sometimes, it would be a north to south troll. It changes day to day.
I remember very well the first time I ever used it. I had installed it the night before, we head out at dark in the morning, start trolling with our ususal pre-dawn setup of glow spoons, GPS speed @ 2.4 to 2.8 mph. Nothing for the first hour. The sun slowly rises, I turn on the Moor Sub troll. It was reading 1.5 at the ball, down 60 ft! I speed up the kicker, gradually, get to 2.4 at the ball, whamo! fish on! Surface speed was 3.6 or more! We kept that troll depth and speed and boxed 10 chinooks that morning.
I've seen this happen so many times. I've seen also the opposite where the down speed was just rippin' at 3.5/4mph when I'd be doing 1.8 on the surface! The spoons were spinning out. It's impossible to have spoons work at all speeds.
I have an assortment that are more speed tolerant that I use when in "search mode" that allows me to troll at faster speeds. But sometime, you have to go slow, like in the spring at ice out in Georgian Bay, we troll in over 100 FOW and troll as slow as possible, (Lymans are deadly then
) and use super light flutter spoons that move well at low speeds.
If you are using mostly spoons (naked, no flasher), I'd say a bottom speed gauge is an invaluable tool. But If you use more speed tolerant lures like flasher combos, it's probably not as critical.
E