A thru-hull transducer is mounting through the hull of the boat. So you would actually take the boat out of the water, drill a hole in the boat approx 2" in diameter(depends on transducer model) and mount the transducer "thru-hull."
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A transom-mount transducer is a transducer bolted to the transom of a boat.
Both kinds of transducers need to be submerged in the water for them to work correctly.
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I dont know a whole lot about this but I do know you dont drill a hole thru the hull. I have a ranger and from the factory mine was placed inside of the hull under my battery storage no hole needed to be drilled. But on a transom mount you have to drill holes into the transom.
Older office doors had a glass window above, which could be opened for ventilation. A burglar could break into an office by smashing or forcing this doorway window open and climbing through. So, the idea is entering but not legally.
*The question clearly asks about the number of PEOPLE killed...* Chrissie Watkins (Susan Backline) Alex M. Kintner (Jeffrey Voorhees) Ben Gardner (Craig Kingsbury) The man on the bark (uncredited) Quint (Robert Shaw) In the book, the body count is a little different... - Chrissy Watkins (much like in the movie) - Alex Kintner (much like in the movie) - an old man (killed the same day as Kintner, just down the beach; witnessed by Brody's deputy Hendricks) - Ben Gardner (they find his boat, blood on the transom, and a tooth, but they don't see him) - Matt Hooper (yes, the marine biologist played by Richard Dreyfuss dies in the book) - Quint
Boat builders manfacture their crafts' in three basic transom heights. The transom height is measured from the top of the transom, (where the engine bolts on), straight down to the keel, (bottom middle), of the boat. A 15'' transom would require a shortshaft engine. A 20" transom would need a longshaft outboard, and a boat with a 25" transom, would require a extra longshaft engine.
The transom is the stern of a boat or ship. On a small boat the outboard engine is clamped to the transom.
At the back of the boat. The transom is reinforced to accommodate the boat motor.
A transom plate is a strengthened area used to attach an outboard motor to the rear (or transom) of a boat. see the related links below.
transom is a bean a window over a door is called a fanlight A Transom IS indeed a window over a door
The "transom" is the back of a boat or ship. For a small boat, an outboard motor might be attached to the transom; for a sailing vessel, the rudder may be attached to the transom. An example sentence might be:"We were on our way back to the dock when a fish jumped over the transom and landed in the boat!"
At the back of the boat. The transom is reinforced to accommodate the boat motor.
It should be all one unit. If not, you would install the door and side lights and then the transom.
The glass in the transom above the door cracked when it was hit by a ricocheting bullet.
No you can not but you can use a long shaft on a 16 inch transom
On the Yamaha outboard, the model number is located on the port, (left), transom mounting bracket. The transom bracket is the part of the engine that is bolted to your boat transom.
An outboard motor generally is attached either directly to the transom of the boat, or to a bracket that is attached to the transom of the boat.