Garmin GPSMAP 2006C User Manual
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Understanding Sonar
Appendix H
Understanding Sonar
If you are unfamiliar with basic sonar, or need help determining what is displayed on the graph, this
section may be for you. This section is intended to help the novice user gain some understanding of how 
the GPSMAP 2006/2010 operates when combined with a GSD 20 Sonar Module and how it can help 
improve their fishing productivity.
To understand what the unit is displaying, it is important to have a general knowledge of how the
unit works and how it determines what to display. Briefly described, the unit operates by transmitting 
sound waves toward the bottom of a lake, stream, or seabed in a cone-shaped pattern. When a transmit-
ted soundwave strikes an underwater object such as the bottom, a piece of structure, or a fish, sound is 
reflected back to the transducer. The transducer collects the reflected sound waves and sends the data to 
the unit to be processed and displayed on the graph. The underwater data is displayed on the graph in the 
order that it is returned: first returned—first on the graph. The diagram to the left demonstrates this by 
showing an underwater scene as it would be displayed on the graph. Generally speaking, if the only thing 
between the transducer and the bottom is water, the first strong return will come from the bottom directly 
below the transducer. The first strong return sets the bottom level. Weaker secondary returns provide the 
detailed data. Sonar returns display as reds (strongest), then oranges (strong), yellows (medium), greens 
(weaker), and blues (weakest) on color models and dark (strongest) to lighter (weaker) shades of gray on 
monochrome units.
That is a brief description of how your GPSMAP 2006/2010 operates when combined with a GSD 20
Sonar Module. The following pages will show how this data can help you to improve your fishing.
This fish is currently in a dead zone and is not 
detected by the sonar. The fish is in the coverage 
area of the transducer, but remember– the first 
strong return sets the bottom level. The fish will 
eventually be detected when the first strong return 
sets the bottom level below the fish.