How does the Magnabait™ compare with the Biosonix™ (BSX™)?

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Written by John Kosbab   
Friday, 21 December 2007
We’ve received a lot of questions wanting a comparison between the Biosonix™ and the Magnabait™.  In truth they are technologically and philosophically very different.  Even our goals are slightly different.

I’ve not yet tried a BSX™ but the people behind it are first rate.  Accomplished people do not destroy reputations built on a lifetime of hard work by lying.  I believe their product is of high quality as compared to most products in recreational fishing.  Is the BSX™ worth the money?  Underwater sound fidelity is extremely hard to achieve, especially in a small compact package at a low price.  No one knows that more than we do.  A small scientific underwater speaker/transducer with the amplifier and power source would normally cost $1,200.00 and up, way up.  Commercial fishing versions are very expensive.  Based on that, we’d say that the BSX™ at $700 is quite fairly priced.

Which device catches more fish?  If you just hang the Magnabait™ over the side of the boat as you do with the BSX and compare sound attraction only, our numbers are very close to their published data.  I doubt there is a five percent difference either way when fishing for bass and other sunfishes.  I’m sure the quantity of their data is much greater than ours in this area.  I’m fairly certain that adding scent plus the pulsing light, both standard on the Magnabait™, gives our product a greater potential advantage especially in darker waters.

This is especially likely because the Magnabait™ can be positioned far from the boat or shoreline (See our Fishing Strategies section on the website).  It’s self-contained, buoyant energy source needs no heavy electric cable to power it.  This allows fish to position themselves normally. With the Magnabait™, this serves an additional role in distracting the fishes’ attention away from your boat or even your outline if you are fishing from shore.

We at Magnabait™ have substantial experience with trout and other salmonids as well as various saltwater in-shore and coral reef species.  The BSX™ marketing strongly implies that it was purposely built for bass and sunfish species.  Taking them at their word, it’s hard to imagine that the BSX™ could compete with the Magnabait™ in the trout and salmonid areas as well as with the pike species.

Did the people at Biosonix™ make a mistake?  NO.  There was a great deal of research that was already published for decades regarding specific sounds and frequencies that demonstrated an attraction for certain types of fish.  The basic underwater audio technology is similar in many ways to what we saw at Sea World or on the Flipper TV show of long ago.  They took a prudent, conservative approach.  If we’d begun by seeking bass, we’d have done the same.

Our product was developed for very high production because it's origional design was suited for use in hundred of thousands of caribean lobster traps.  The BSX™ does not seem to be.  When we began, no scientists had proven there was a lobster/crayfish language.  Even more remote was the fact that fish recognized the crayfishes’ calls and used them to hunt for them.  Who knew?  Even we didn’t.

Now we come down to the substantial philosophical differences between the Magnabait™ and the BSX™.  The BSX™ was clearly built for tournament bass fishermen.  It has rechargeable batteries and multiple sounds that are further adjustable.  I am told that you can even buy optional cards that are endorsed by your favorite celebrity bass fisherman or woman.  That’s great marketing, but dubious science.

The full-time tournament bass fisherman spends hundreds of hours per year on the water so a rechargeable unit makes sense.  A transducer also requires a lot of power so even a recreational fisherman would need frequent recharging of his BSX™.

The Magnabait™ was originally developed for commercial fishing.  It was designed to spend over a month unattended in the open ocean come what may.  It is extremely efficient with its self-contained power source.  When Hurricane Wilma hit our storage facility on Marathon Key, Florida, some units traveled the Gulf Stream as far north as Nova Scotia and still worked like new.

Our overall goal is to add even more features and reduce the price over time.  We’ve already begun research and patent work for future versions.

Quite frankly, recharging a true underwater unit often results in lots of leaks due to dirt and human error.  This would ruin your Magnabait™ as well as your following trip.  It’s also very expensive.  Above water technology such as the BSX™ can use the same inexpensive technology you see in every home from a digital camera to a portable stereo.  We are quite aware that most of our customers would not run out of the power in their Magnabait™ before our future units come to the market in 2009 or 2010.  Most of them would rather not spend too much of their hard-earned money on technology that will become obsolete.  They’d prefer to spend as little as possible to try the Magnabait™ concept, then once they are satisfied, they can use the money they would have spent on recharging the old unit to purchase a new more advanced model.

By the time you read this, we’ll probably have a discount program in place so that if you are a user of multiple Magnabait units, you’ll qualify for a substantial discount.

The BSX™ has six sounds plus more you can buy.  Apparently they are almost infinitely adjustable.  Let’s say you have seven sounds with only ten adjustments each. That alone is 70 possibilities.  If you discard half and spend ten minutes each testing the remaining 35, that’s 350 minutes.  That’s almost six hours to dial in the optimal signal set.  That doesn’t even include the fact that the weather plus several other factors will change over that six hours.  This may have a toy-like fascination for a person with a lot of spare fishing time.

Coming from a commercial fishing background, this is stupefying to me.  A fishing captain would throw me off the boat for even suggesting that it would be his responsibility to tune in my product. 

He’d say, “You find the signal that works best 95% of the time.  Don’t expect me to spend my time doing your work.”

The truth is that fishing captains are usually far more blunt that that, but you get the picture.

Inside the Magnabait™  are batteries, a computer, and a speaker.  That’s everything we’d need to add a variety of additional sounds at no extra cost.  We even know what other sounds have been tested and where to get duplicates.  If we find something that is better, we’ll use it.  Until then, we’ll stick with what we know works really well.

The Bottom Line: The BSX™ is impressive looking.  The Magnabait™ is ugly and looks like a green tombstone.  The BSX™ is complex with bells and whistles.  The Magnabait™ is brutally simple.  The BSX™ is kind of like a BMW or an Audi while the Magnabait™ reminds me of a pickup truck set up for off-road use.  I think both are worth the money.  It really depends on what you have to spend and how you want to travel.

 
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