Not any images, but some solid advice from KVD (it's an excerpt of a John Phillips e-book on bass fishing, quoted by Jay Kumar's BassBlaster e-mail newsletter last week):
http://us4.campaign-archive1.com/?u=f77d7e4bdee78dd55a299e813&id=1eda14e37b&e=26c4c15ca0Tip of the Day How KVD finds ledges, and not just any old ledges.
Excerpted from this new eBook, all quotes from KVD.
> "I don't get on the Internet and search for information. I look at a lake map to try to determine where the bass should be at the time of year when I'm fishing, under the weather and the water conditions I'm fishing. Then, I study a topo map of the lake to see the ledges and the drop-offs that show-up on the map."
> "I'll go one step further and graph the area, once I reach the lake. I use a Humminbird side-imaging unit.... With a Humminbird side-imaging depth finder, I can look at about 200 feet of bottom at once."
> "Also, to locate the ledges, I spend a lot of time with crankbaits trying to cover the ledges and searching for those little ledges that most people may not find. I'm looking for the very subtle dropoffs, like a 1- or a 2-foot dropoff. I still won't find those hidden bottom breaks, unless I spend a lot of time cranking a crankbait. Crankbaits give me a better picture of the bottom and enable me to feel the type of structure on the bottom."