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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
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    The best toy i ever bought

    I had a perfectly good trolling motor, and didn't really won't to buy one. but I got to reading about the I-pilot and bought one. and that was the best money I ever spent. I fish by myself most of the time. and lunching your boat with a friend, you can just back the rig in the water and pull out and go park the truck. and when you walk back to the ramp your friend can pull over and pick you up. but when by yourself, if the floating dock has a few other people tied up loading their stuff. you have to keep one ramp blocked while you wait for a spot at the dock, or tie to a rock or tree at the bank. and that isn't good for a fiberglass boat. here is one thing I like about the i-pilot, it works like a friend, when your lunching the boat by yourself. back the trailer in the water, unload boat and pull up to dock or bank and step out of boat. use the remote and troll the boat out from bank about 30 feet and push the little anchor button. it will keep it's self in a 5 ft. circle while your gone to park the truck. when you get back, use the remote and troll the boat to where you are standing and get in. the i-pilot will also mark a fishing trail, you can press the button to record a trail as you troll alone. but here is how I do it. a spot that I know I want to fish, I lower the trolling motor, so the GPS is in the up position. and loosen the knob that adjust how deep you want the prop to be in the water, pull the trolling motor shaft up so the prop is out of the water, and tighten the knob. then start the big motor. press the record button on the remote to start the trail. then drive the boat alone the trail you want to fish. it will mark the trail as fast or slow as you want to go. then stop and lower the trolling motor back down in the water and fish the trail from end to start or from start to end. and set the cruse control for ever how fast you want to fish, and you don't have to do a thing but fish. the i-pilot will follow the trail just as you marked it. and when you hook up with a fish, press the anchor button and the i-pilot will hold the boat in the 5 ft. circle until you land the fish. don't have to worry about drifting near the bank or drifting out into the lake while fighting the fish. you stay where you pushed the anchor button. thought this might help some of you guys that fish alone like me, and it does so much more, but I've written a book already.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Carlisle
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    1,096
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    Quote Originally Posted by waterdog101 View Post
    I had a perfectly good trolling motor, and didn't really won't to buy one. but I got to reading about the I-pilot and bought one. and that was the best money I ever spent. I fish by myself most of the time. and lunching your boat with a friend, you can just back the rig in the water and pull out and go park the truck. and when you walk back to the ramp your friend can pull over and pick you up. but when by yourself, if the floating dock has a few other people tied up loading their stuff. you have to keep one ramp blocked while you wait for a spot at the dock, or tie to a rock or tree at the bank. and that isn't good for a fiberglass boat. here is one thing I like about the i-pilot, it works like a friend, when your lunching the boat by yourself. back the trailer in the water, unload boat and pull up to dock or bank and step out of boat. use the remote and troll the boat out from bank about 30 feet and push the little anchor button. it will keep it's self in a 5 ft. circle while your gone to park the truck. when you get back, use the remote and troll the boat to where you are standing and get in. the i-pilot will also mark a fishing trail, you can press the button to record a trail as you troll alone. but here is how I do it. a spot that I know I want to fish, I lower the trolling motor, so the GPS is in the up position. and loosen the knob that adjust how deep you want the prop to be in the water, pull the trolling motor shaft up so the prop is out of the water, and tighten the knob. then start the big motor. press the record button on the remote to start the trail. then drive the boat alone the trail you want to fish. it will mark the trail as fast or slow as you want to go. then stop and lower the trolling motor back down in the water and fish the trail from end to start or from start to end. and set the cruse control for ever how fast you want to fish, and you don't have to do a thing but fish. the i-pilot will follow the trail just as you marked it. and when you hook up with a fish, press the anchor button and the i-pilot will hold the boat in the 5 ft. circle until you land the fish. don't have to worry about drifting near the bank or drifting out into the lake while fighting the fish. you stay where you pushed the anchor button. thought this might help some of you guys that fish alone like me, and it does so much more, but I've written a book already.
    --
    I am like you, I want one of those so bad I can taste it, Have a perfectly good trolling motor but if I live through the winter to fish again I am getting one in the spring... I don't bass fish anymore and mostly tightline crappie fish, like to fish bottom cover and it is tough fighting the foot control trying to stay over the cover... Is a pretty penny to spend on a trolling motor when you have a perfectly good one on the boat but I just can't go through another fishing season without this little toy.... So far I haven't read anything negative about this trolling motor.... I am hoping I can get it rigged to swap it from the bass boat to the pontoon... I just cant afford two of these toys.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Richmond, Kentucky
    Posts
    2,187
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    They sound awesome...

    It would be hard for me that first time to trust the motor to keep the boat off shore by itself, untied, while I was away parking the truck though...

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Carlisle
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    Quote Originally Posted by MrSplitshot View Post
    They sound awesome...

    It would be hard for me that first time to trust the motor to keep the boat off shore by itself, untied, while I was away parking the truck though...
    --
    I'm not sure I could be that trusting either but I am intrigued with the idea of not having to concentrate so much on boat positioning.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Lexington, KY
    Posts
    11,442
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    Quote Originally Posted by MrSplitshot View Post
    They sound awesome...

    It would be hard for me that first time to trust the motor to keep the boat off shore by itself, untied, while I was away parking the truck though...
    Same here. I work with alot of different technologies and one thing for certain is that they all fail!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Louisville, KY
    Posts
    2,538
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    I'd have trouble trusting the thing too, at least at first. But I'd also want to check and make sure there's no obscure law that some overzealous ranger could ticket you for if he happens to come by and see your boat on the water, un-anchored, with nobody aboard.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
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    2,177
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hlleonard View Post
    --
    I am like you, I want one of those so bad I can taste it, Have a perfectly good trolling motor but if I live through the winter to fish again I am getting one in the spring... I don't bass fish anymore and mostly tightline crappie fish, like to fish bottom cover and it is tough fighting the foot control trying to stay over the cover... Is a pretty penny to spend on a trolling motor when you have a perfectly good one on the boat but I just can't go through another fishing season without this little toy.... So far I haven't read anything negative about this trolling motor.... I am hoping I can get it rigged to swap it from the bass boat to the pontoon... I just cant afford two of these toys.
    I think this will be what you need, to use the same trolling motor on 2 different boats. Quick Release Bracket http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QceAXN0-qpg

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Campbellsville, KY
    Posts
    1,890
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    One of my friends fished with one and absolutely loved it for keeping the boat positioned, BUT he also said if you're fishing along a bank the trolling motor is REALLY slow to turn....This isn't a huge factor if you're fishing a clean bank, but if you're in standing timber it's a nightmare....He said you absolutely can't navigate through the standing timber without hitting everything....As far as striper fishing, crappie fishing, or wanting to set up on a brushpile bass fishing I can see where they'd be extremely beneficial, but they do have their drawbacks

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Carlisle
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    1,096
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    Quote Originally Posted by waterdog101 View Post
    I think this will be what you need, to use the same trolling motor on 2 different boats. Quick Release Bracket http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QceAXN0-qpg
    --
    That looks like it works pretty well, have seen a couple quick disconnects advertised for the power drive but that is the first vid I have seen showing how it works, thanks... Now I cant wait until next spring,I'm probably going regret waiting, amazon has the one I want now for $935 with no shipping charge but I just can't talk myself into buying it right now, I would have to look at it all winter before I got to use it and they have a 2 week window to send it back so I'll have to wait, I might get it and it not work next spring when I take it out... This is a fantastic idea if it works as advertised.... Did you get the one with the universal sonar and if so did you have to buy a cable to connect it to a hummingbird?.. I have a humming bird sonar on both boats and am hoping it will work with both units.

  10. #10
    HURRICANEBOB Guest
    My luck would be someone else with one would be on my frequency, and when I got back to the ramp at Jamestown, I'd find my boat at Wolf Creek Dam ramp.

    Now, if the remote only had a 10 mile range, I could sit on the rear deck in a Jamestown room, and watch my boat fish for me. :-)

    PS: can you program it to pickup hotties at houseboats and bring them back? WINNER!

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
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    Carlisle
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    Quote Originally Posted by HURRICANEBOB View Post

    PS: can you program it to pickup hotties at houseboats and bring them back? WINNER!
    --
    I don't believe this particular model can do that, i think you need the I-PIMP option for that.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    New Albany, Indiana.
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    8,955
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fishin is life View Post
    One of my friends fished with one and absolutely loved it for keeping the boat positioned, BUT he also said if you're fishing along a bank the trolling motor is REALLY slow to turn....This isn't a huge factor if you're fishing a clean bank, but if you're in standing timber it's a nightmare....He said you absolutely can't navigate through the standing timber without hitting everything....As far as striper fishing, crappie fishing, or wanting to set up on a brushpile bass fishing I can see where they'd be extremely beneficial, but they do have their drawbacks
    Man, that is EXACTLY why I got rid of the AutoPilot that I had on my boat when I first purchased it. It was a seriously expensive motor, but all that expense was built into useless technology. I sold it for less than 1/2 what it was worth to a guy on here.............THEN I added a few bucks to the money I received and purchased a Minn Kota 70 / 24v system with cable drive.

    My biggest issue was turning the dang thing. AND it's horrible method could be heard half way across the lake, so I guarantee the purty brownfish in my vicinity could hear it.

    Yep, dropped that product as quickly as I could.

    Now, don't get me wrong........it was FANTASTIC for pointing and forgetting and fishing. GREAT. But if I needed to navigate as fishin stated, it was very hard.

    Later,

    Geo

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