I am currently using a 4x leader with 5x tippet and I have been breaking fish off at the knot that connects my leader to my tippet. I recently switched from a double surgeon's knot to an orvis knot to make this connection stronger. However, I am wondering if I can buy a higher quality tippet to make this connection even better. What brand of tippet and leader do you guys recommend?
For me its cheap old umqua for trout fishing. None of that fancy expensive stuff, I just dont see a reason to start using expensive line after all the years of not even having the option. I use a 5x or 6x leader to 5x tippet or 6x tippet, tied with a double uni knot. One thing to be careful of is when using split shot not to smash it really hard to the line, it will weaken it. Good luck and try new things until something works for you.
If you are using two different kinds of line for your leader and tippet that will weaken the connection. I've done some reading on the subject and it apears from tests that the good old blood knot is the strongest connection here. I'm lazy, though, and almost always use a double surgeons knot.
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"Nothing makes a fish bigger than almost being caught."
a good friend of mine once told me "whats better than a double sergeons knot??....a triple sergeons knot" thats what i normaly use and dont seem to have a problem its keeping the hook in the fishes mouth where i strugle....hahaha
When you say that using two different types of line weakens the connection, due you mean, for instance, mono and fluoro, or do you just mean two different brands of mono?
Mono to fluorocarbon connections are definitely weaker. Different brands of mono aren't usually going to give you a problem, but I've had problems in the past. Make sure you check the strength of your knots before you fish.
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"Nothing makes a fish bigger than almost being caught."
I have been using Rio mono leaders and tippet material in 5x. So far I have been happy with the performance of the Rio brand. I haven't tried flourocarbon since I can't stomach $12 for spool of tippet material.
I use a triple surgeon's knot to attach the tippet to the leader. I too have had some breakage at this connection, but not all that often. I make sure I put a little spit on the knot before pulling it together to make it set nice and tight. I also leave a little extra on the tag ends to allow stretching/tightening of the knot.
Hey SCM, try a drop of super glue or fishin' glue on your knot. It dries almost instantly and strengthens the knot a whole lot. I don't always use this but when I do I find a noticeable difference in knot strength. Chuck
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hey chuck just remember even though you have glue you have to bring those fish in quick before they get off, CARSON, hahaha, good times though, gonna be going again on thursday next week, keep them flies went on the truckie and bring me back some pics
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Fishing isnt about catching fish, its not about who caught the most, or who caught the biggest, its about the experience that you have on the water, and the life long bonds you make with others on the journey to becoming a better person inside.
You should wet the knot before tightening it. I always wet the line right before tightening the knot down, it makes the knot much stronger, Also, I work the fish, get it alittle tired first before bringing it in. And i never grab the leader with my hand, i let the rod bring the fish in. Good Luck!
I just use the ol blood knot for leader to tippet connection, I too always use rio mono leaders and rio mono tippet material, I never have had break off problems with this setup, I have thought about using a dab of super glue, Good idea chuck. The flourocarbon in my opinion isn't worth the price. But awhile back the store in winters had a bunch of mismarked flourocarbon tippet spools, HAHA They were only like 3 or 4 bucks, So I picked a few up. I also never ever use the same tippet for more then one trip, Every single fishing trip gets a fresh tippet, Many times I also will tie on new tippet a few times thourghout the day. Also make sure you are wetting your knots before you sinch em down, use saliva or water. And if the blood knot isnt perfect I start over with another one.
I use Rio mono leaders, and rio fluorcarbon tippet. The fluorocarbon tippet will really help to catch more fish. You can usually use one size up 4x versus 5x and land more fish. If you haven't used Rio super fluoro then you should try it. In most cases you really don't use a lot of tippet per trip. The few extra dollars is definitely going to catch you more fish. I also think it is stronger than mono.
A few more things. Test every knot when you tie it and after you clip it. I tug on the line and put a lot of pressure on the knot. If it breaks or slips then you know you did something wrong. I usually just use a double surgeon for connecting tippet and an improved clinch for tying flies on. This has worked very well with very little snaps at the knot.
I have been using mono leader with flouruocarbon for quite some time and havent noticed a lot of breakage. I allways use a blood knot and always wet it with a little spit before pulling tight. I like the flourocarbon for nymphing because it sinks lots better than mono.
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God does not subtract from your life the hours you spend fishing. Â Â Herbert Hoover.
I fished with Otter once. He was hammering fish, and I couldn't buy a strike. We were using the same setup, the only difference was the tippet. He was using fluorocarbon, and I was using monofilament. I have since switched to fluorocarbon. I use Cabela's Prestige Plus tippet material. It is Gamma Processed, the same process that Frog Hair uses on their fluorocarbon to make the line more flexible and stretchy. It's $14.99 for a 50 yd spool.
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"Nothing makes a fish bigger than almost being caught."
I also use fluorocarbon for my tippet. It's what my instructor told me to use and I have never tried anything else. I make my own leader from some 3x to my weight...then 4x to the first fly, 5x to the second...depending on where I am fishing and size of the fish I hope to catch. I rarely use 6x. I change out the tippet the most often and use a tripple surgeons knot to connect the 3x and 4x...always wet the knot. I have only lost my tippet a few times in the last 5 months, usually on a bad snag and once on a monster hit that freight trained downstream.
gotta love those putah mach trucks sometimes they just get outta control and you cant do nothing about it,
well dont know if anyone would like to know, but jt was laughin at me cuz i was using a 9 wt rod with 5 wt line, yes a telephone pole with very small line, but it was working for me, but i have now upgraded very well pickin it up tonight, and first thing thursday with be tearing into those putah pigs
this is what i got
St. Croix 9'Imperial fly rod 5WT 4 peice Rocky Mountain Orvis line backin everything for 140
and on top of that got my 50 flies i ordered from blueflycafe.com for 38 bucks and these are actually very very good flies, well built, look really good, cant wait to try them
well see you all on the creek
hey fly girl still waiting to try those famous cookies, you are more than welcome to join me and lilwhippersnapper on thursday, just pm me and ill let you know where we will be
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Fishing isnt about catching fish, its not about who caught the most, or who caught the biggest, its about the experience that you have on the water, and the life long bonds you make with others on the journey to becoming a better person inside.
Flouro is more expensive but sometimes it's worth it. It's thinner than mono and sinks faster. When fishing Putah you don't really need to use a tapered leader unless you're throwing dries and need your leader to turn over properly. When nymphing you're usually roll casting or loading and lobbing, I don't thik I ever false cast when nymphing. On Putah I use straight 4x flouro with much success:)
Wet the knot when tying, I just pass mine through my mouth before I cinch it down and get some spit on there, otherwise the friction significantly heats and weakens the line as you tighten it down. Something that hasn't been mentioned is how you're playing the fish, it may be that you need to set the drag a bit looser, let the fish run a little more or try steering it to the side away from trouble if possible.
The weak point in the chain is the knot at the fly and at the tippet, if you're breaking at either of those places it isn't necessarily a bad knot (though that's the first thing to look at), and if it's an explosive run by a big fish there isn't necessarily anything you can do about it. But it does help a lot to stop after every break-off and try to figure out if there was something you could have done differently to avoid it. Could be the knot, or how you play the fish, or maybe you've been using up some old stock of tippet material that's been out in the sun too much, or the tippet got damaged during casting or a snag or from a split shot or other gear attached to it, etc. I was getting an unusual number of breakoffs that I couldn't explain, I figured it might be some old-stock of tippet so I tossed it and got some new stuff and the problem disappeared, though I may have become a little more diligent about my knots at the same time.
Just for kicks you might want to start checking your rig periodically by tugging at all the knots and connections and see how they're holding up, maybe even every 5 minutes or so just until you get some confidence in your knots. Definitely check them after you tie them on and before the first cast.
When it comes to drag, I keep mine a lot tighter than I used to. You'd be surprised how tight you can have your drag and still have a beast pull line off your reel. When the fish give me a chance, I horse them. When they want to run, I let them. You don't want your drag too loose. Then, you might end up over-playing the fish.
Most of my break-offs come when fish get line around rocks, submerged bushes, and reel handles or tippet spools. I really hate those last two, and there's only one person to blame for those.
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"Nothing makes a fish bigger than almost being caught."
Fishing isnt about catching fish, its not about who caught the most, or who caught the biggest, its about the experience that you have on the water, and the life long bonds you make with others on the journey to becoming a better person inside.
the flouro sinks much faster than mono, pretty much 4x flouro is like using 5x mono, which that is what i run, actually more like a tappered leader that has been chopper down from 9 ft to about 7, then 3 ft of 3x to the first fly the 12-15 inches of 5x to the dropper, and eric you have seen it work for me very well, 4x flouro all the way down would work pretty well, only problem is you will have to replace that alot, with the set up i use and many others, it only takes a 3ft peice of 3x and a 12-15inch peice of 5x, all mono, you could just get some 5x or 4x flouro for that last fly, but again you seen me fishing that one day before i got with jt and it was workin fine for me, and i know alot of people out there use the same set up. its was i was taught and it works great, if you brake of you dont have to replace the whole 10 ft peice of leader, just sections of it. much cheaper and much faster
__________________
Fishing isnt about catching fish, its not about who caught the most, or who caught the biggest, its about the experience that you have on the water, and the life long bonds you make with others on the journey to becoming a better person inside.
I don't use 4X for flies #20 and smaller. Some do but not me. In fact, I use 6X for the tiny flies. I use 5X to the first fly (if it's bigger than #20) and 6X to the smaller fly (if it's smaller than #20).
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"Nothing makes a fish bigger than almost being caught."
Hi JT, I hear ya on the break-offs from handles & spools. I've learned to focus hard on "line management" once I have a fish on, making sure the line is not going to tangle around spool, handle, fingers, anything I'm wearing, rocks sticks, my foot, etc. It really hurts to lose a fish to one of those, especially when you've been doing everything right on a big fish and in just one split second they make a big run when you're not ready and **ping** they're gone.