I don't think it's so much a question of accuracy as it is a question of usefulness. The claimed advantage of forward-looking sonar is that you can "see" what's ahead of you and so not hit it. Based on my experience, for a cruising boat it's not much value. If you have a decent chart plotter and a depth sounder that's all you need not to hit anything in front of you. You can see where you are on the chart, you can see what's in front of you on the chart, and the depth sounder tells you how much water is under your keel. The chart tells you what the depth is going to do as you move forward.
For fishing I can see where a forward-looking sonar might be of some value. Our here we fish with downriggers. So we've got heavy cannonballs down 100', 150', 200' on a wire dpending on what we're fishing for. Given the rocky nature of the bottoms here, it would be nice to know in advance if the bottom was going to start coming up, or if there was a narrow ledge up ahead so I could crank the weights up enough to clear the obstruction rather than risk hanging them up in the rocks. Without knowing what the bottom's doing out front of you, the first you know of a rock ledge or rise in the bottom is when you're over it and it's painted on the depth finder at which point it might be too late to get the weights up to clear.
By the same token, I could see where forward looking sonar might be useful if you cruise in real shallow water, or waters in which you have to follow narrow, twisting channels through shallow water. Even though the channels and shallow spots should be on the chart, if there's not much margin for error a forward-looking unit could be helpful.
But in all the boating we've done starting in the mid-80s with the Arima and now with the Arima and the GB, I have not once found myself wishing we had forward looking sonar, other then the downrigger issue I described.
Side-scan sonar I believe is primarily used for finding stuff, like wrecks, downed planes, the Loch Ness monster, or missing H-bombs. As I understand it, it lets you "see" a much larger swath of the bottom as opposed to a conventional straight-down sonar. So you cover more ground with each pass. I'm guessing a good one is Not Cheap.
-- Edited by Marin on Thursday 29th of April 2010 01:25:28 PM