Fish-Finder Factory Calibration Story
Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2012 8:49 pm
Hi All -
Thought I'd share a "Marine Electronics" story from my past...
Back in the early '80s I worked at a marine electronics company in NJ. My career path there led me through "Final Test and Calibration Technician". We sold the "spinner" type fish-finders back then.
One of my tasks was to calibrate the depth settings on the fish-finders. In order to do this I had to place the transducer in a fixture which then lowered it into a tank of water, but rather than being in the vertical position, it was in the horizontal. You see, the tank looked like a 2' x 2' x 10' fiberglass and plywood coffin filled with water.
The transducer pulse didn't mind which direction it traveled and as long as I set the display for 10' it was calibrated. (It was a little more involved than that, but that's the basics of it).
The water in the tank was stagnant and it got a bit funky over time and it needed to be filtered periodically. We had a portable pool filter that I would wheel over, put the intake and discharge hoses into the tank and let her run.
One day I left the filter running while I went to lunch. When I came back, I found that while I was away, the discharge hose had hopped out of the tank and was emptying the contents of the H2O coffin onto the factory floor!
Math time: 2'x2'x10'=40 cubic feet... ...or just under 300 gallons!
I learned how to use a mop that day but we had the cleanest floor in all the factory.
"Updated Filtering Procedure: 1. Firmly secure both intake and discharge hoses to tank... "
Thought I'd share a "Marine Electronics" story from my past...
Back in the early '80s I worked at a marine electronics company in NJ. My career path there led me through "Final Test and Calibration Technician". We sold the "spinner" type fish-finders back then.
One of my tasks was to calibrate the depth settings on the fish-finders. In order to do this I had to place the transducer in a fixture which then lowered it into a tank of water, but rather than being in the vertical position, it was in the horizontal. You see, the tank looked like a 2' x 2' x 10' fiberglass and plywood coffin filled with water.
The transducer pulse didn't mind which direction it traveled and as long as I set the display for 10' it was calibrated. (It was a little more involved than that, but that's the basics of it).
The water in the tank was stagnant and it got a bit funky over time and it needed to be filtered periodically. We had a portable pool filter that I would wheel over, put the intake and discharge hoses into the tank and let her run.
One day I left the filter running while I went to lunch. When I came back, I found that while I was away, the discharge hose had hopped out of the tank and was emptying the contents of the H2O coffin onto the factory floor!
Math time: 2'x2'x10'=40 cubic feet... ...or just under 300 gallons!
I learned how to use a mop that day but we had the cleanest floor in all the factory.
"Updated Filtering Procedure: 1. Firmly secure both intake and discharge hoses to tank... "