Furuno FCV-600 and FCV-800, expanding the meaning of standalone fish finder

Ben Stein

Ben Stein

Publisher of Panbo.com, passionate marine electronics enthusiast, 100-ton USCG master.

3 Responses

  1. You guys can be forgiven for missing some key points since you don’t do a lot of fishing. There are many people who just prefer a standalone fishfinder to using a multifunction display because of its portrait display orientation or ease of access to controls with dedicated buttons. Others have have legacy chartplotters or other manufacturers’ equipment and want to have a Furuno sounder. In that context , the FCV-800 has some interesting features. Most notable is the ability to drive three channels usiing the two transducer ports. This is not possible with the internal sounder of a TZT 3. Medium band CHIRP transducers have become popular for trolling in the past few years. With a TZT 3, if you want to connect a medium band transducers such as a B175M, you have to sacrifice the high frequency port unless you have two MFDs. Otherwise you can only have H+L or M+L. With an FCV-800, it is possible to have H+L on one port and M on the second.

    On the negative side, the FCV800 does not have the selectable frequency output of the TZT 3 internal sounder. I can drive my B175H transducer as a fixed frequency at 210Hz or CHIRP over its whole band or in a custom narrower CHIRP band. With an FCV800, it could only operate in CHIRP across the full band.

    Anyway, these new fishfinders offer an upgrade path for people who have very old Furuno sounders like the popular FCV582 — which are excellent machines and never seem to die!

  2. Ben Ellison Ben Ellison says:

    The TZ iBoat module that can display and control these fishfinders is now available:

    https://www.furunousa.com/en/company/news_room/2024_fcv-tz_iboat_app

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