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Lowrance SplitShot vs TripleShot: Which Fishfinder to Choose? (2026)

The essentials in 30 seconds

  • SplitShot = vertical view (CHIRP + DownScan). You see what passes under the boat.
  • TripleShot = the same + SideScan: a lateral scan over several tens of meters on each side. You see structures and posts around the boat.
  • The choice only really matters for the 7-inch models: the 5" Eagle range is SplitShot; the 9" range is TripleShot.
  • The Eagle fishfinder port accepts both sensors — but buying a second sensor later costs more than choosing the right one upfront.
  • Workshop rule: stationary or vertical fishing over known depths → SplitShot is enough. Prospecting, posts, structures → TripleShot.

Table of contents

The two fishfinders in one sentence

The SplitShot combines two technologies in a single sensor: CHIRP sonar (the classic view — water column, fish arches, bottom hardness) and DownScan Imaging (a near-photographic image of what passes under the hull). Frequencies 455/800 kHz.

The TripleShot uses exactly these two technologies and adds SideScan: a lateral sweep that maps the bottom over several tens of meters to the left and right of the boat. Same display unit, same transom installation — only the sensor changes.

What each technology actually shows

This is the #1 source of post-purchase disappointment, so let’s be concrete:

  • CHIRP — for fishing: fish arches in mid-water, schools, bottom hardness. This is the view you look at 80% of the time once underway.
  • DownScan — for identifying what’s below: wreck, rock, seagrass, branch. Excellent for reading structure, less clear for isolated fish. Lowrance’s FishReveal function overlays CHIRP echoes on the DownScan image so you don’t have to switch between pages.
  • SideScan (TripleShot only) — for prospecting: in one pass at moderate speed, you sweep a corridor of several tens of meters on each side and spot rock heads, wrecks, and posts without running over them. It’s the difference between searching for a post by crisscrossing for an hour and finding it in three passes.

The simple test: if your fishing consists of returning to spots you know and reading the water column, SideScan will rarely serve you. If you regularly prospect for new posts — or fish structure (bass on rock, pike on drop-offs) — this is the tool that changes the outing.

Decision grid

In the current Eagle lineup, the SplitShot/TripleShot choice only really matters for the 7-inch models — the 5" range is SplitShot; the 9" range is TripleShot. Current prices are on the product pages.

Display SplitShot (vertical) TripleShot (+ SideScan)
Eagle 5 Eagle 5 SplitShot — (not in catalog)
Eagle 7 Eagle 7 SplitShot Eagle 7 TripleShot
Eagle 9 — (not in catalog) Eagle 9 TripleShot

SplitShot is enough if: you fish stationary or vertically over known depths, in calm freshwater or simple coastal waters. You’ll have CHIRP + DownScan + FishReveal — the essentials for reading fish.

TripleShot is required if: you prospect (new posts, structures, wrecks), fish bass on rock or pike on drop-offs, or want to map the approaches to an anchorage. The lateral view is the only real difference between the two — and it changes how you fish.

Changing your mind later: the shared Eagle port

Eagle’s key feature: the fishfinder port accepts both sensors. An Eagle 7 SplitShot can later take a TripleShot sensor without changing the display. This is real flexibility — but not a buying strategy: display + second sensor bought later, the total exceeds the original TripleShot bundle, and you’re left with a SplitShot sensor in a drawer.

Bottom line: if SideScan is likely in your use case, choose TripleShot upfront. Delayed upgrades are for when your fishing actually evolves. (Going the other way, the SplitShot sensor alone is also available — useful for warranty replacements.)

The limits of SideScan (know before you choose)

Workshop honesty — SideScan isn’t magic:

  • It reads best at slow to moderate speeds. At planing speed, the lateral image degrades — it’s a prospecting tool, not a transit tool.
  • It’s a coastal and lake tool. The lateral sweep uses high frequencies (455/800 kHz): its lateral range is measured in tens of meters. In deep water, vertical CHIRP remains the primary tool.
  • It requires a little learning. Reading a SideScan image (shadows, lateral distance) takes a few outings. DownScan, on the other hand, is immediately readable.

None of these points are dealbreakers — but if your program is 100% vertical fishing in deep water, SideScan won’t add value: look at depth-optimized sensor versions (see FAQ) or a chartplotter instead.

Workshop verdict

On the Eagle 7 — the format we sell the most — our position is simple: TripleShot is the right choice for most coastal anglers, because prospecting is part of the real fishing for almost everyone. We reserve SplitShot for strictly vertical programs — and that’s a perfectly honorable choice: it’s the same quality of reading under the boat.

Beyond that: if you want high-definition lateral imaging (distinguishing the branches of a submerged tree), that’s the next tier — Active Imaging HD sensor on the HDS Pro platform. We compare all this in the Lowrance fishfinder comparison.

FAQ

Can I upgrade from SplitShot to TripleShot later?

Yes — the Eagle fishfinder port accepts both sensors, and the TripleShot sensor is sold separately. But display + second sensor bought later, the total exceeds the original TripleShot bundle: if SideScan is likely in your use case, choose it upfront.

What about the 50/200 HDI and 83/200 HDI versions?

Same vertical family (CHIRP + DownScan) but with classic sonar frequencies: 50/200 kHz for deeper water with a narrow cone, 83/200 kHz for coastal use. The SplitShot (455/800 kHz) prioritizes fine detail in coastal waters. If you regularly fish beyond ~100 m depth, look at the HDI versions.

Does SideScan work in deep water?

Its lateral range (high frequencies 455/800 kHz) is measured in tens of meters: it’s a coastal and lake prospecting tool. In deep water, vertical reading (CHIRP) remains primary — this is also true for much more expensive fishfinders.

How is it different from Active Imaging HD on HDS Pro?

Same principle (CHIRP + DownScan + SideScan) but higher resolution — you can distinguish fine structural details. This is the sensor for HDS Pro platforms, another level of budget and ecosystem. See the fishfinder comparison.

Also read

About the author

Pol Conin, Digital Manager at Skysat. Software engineer and tech entrepreneur, Pol joined the adventure to bring Skysat into the digital age. Goal: transition from a classic engineering office to a global technology platform. See his author page for the full list of articles signed.

Wikidata: Q139565078


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