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Newbie leader question
On Nov 14, 9:47 am, wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 09:14:23 -0800, Mike wrote: On 14 Nov, 16:43, Dave LaCourse wrote: On 14 Nov 2007 15:29:20 GMT, Scott Seidman wrote: The next time you store them on your reel, you'll find the same problem. You'll need to find some way to deal with it on the stream. Simple stretching, or passing them through your fingers with the intention of heating them up a little with friction really does the trick. If you straighten them with hot water and then coil them for storage in your vest, you will still have memory. If you can not get up enough heat with your fingers, there are leader straighteners on the market. The trouble with them, however, is that you can not control the heat. Too much heat and you damage the leader. It's best to use your fingers, and if you do not *feel* the heat, you are not applying enough pressure with your fingers. When you placed the leaders in hot water, what do you think straightened them? The heat. There is no hot water on a stream, so a leader straightener or your fingers are the only solution. Where are you fishing using 7x, and what for, Dave? Dave All nylon has memory, it is an intrinsic property of thermoplastics. One can not remove it, one can merely program the nylon memory to another shape. The melting point of nylon is between 190°C-350°C 374°F-663°F so you can boil it for hours without having any adverse affect on it. Wrong. Mono absorbs water, even when in water at fishing temps, and in boiling water, it'll absorb more. Boiling it "for hours" will weaken it to the point of making it useless for the intended purpose. In fact, placing mono in boiling water for more than a second or two will weaken it. If you absolutely _insist_ on using hot water (a bad idea), don't use boiling water and pour the water from the pot/kettle onto the line, don't put the line into boiling or near-boiling water. But again, either is not a good idea. He started out with leaders that were _probably_ "bad," and now, the chances are greater that they are "bad." Attempting to straighten very fine nylon with oneīs fingers is not an easy thing to do, esepcially when the ambient temeprature is low, and using things like rubber straigtheners etc, can damage the line considerably. He already told you that the advice I gave him worked. No, he stated that he found that it straightened the leaders. I'm sure it did. That doesn't mean he now has leaders that are OK. R MC- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - He could **** in his boot and put the leader in it for a while. But even if the directions for getting the **** out of the boot were printed on the heel he wouldn't be able to do it. |
Newbie leader question
On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 09:44:31 -0800, Mike
wrote: If the material is "kinked" then it has been deformed beyond its intrinsic memory capacity to recover. There is no way to straighten such a kink completely, because the nylon has lost its memory at that point. We were talking about "coils", not kinks. You are correct. My bad. I meant coils, not kinks. You people are sometimes so stupid that itīs painful to obse Pure bull****. Hey, Mike. You know what Gehrke would do if dropping the leader in hot water was the only way to straighten it? He'd design a streamside heater of some kind. Now's your chance, Bunkie, to outdo the Ginkster. d;o) |
Newbie leader question
On 14 Nov, 19:05, Dave LaCourse wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 09:37:28 -0800, Mike wrote: If you straighten them in hot water, and then place them back in the packets, and keep them in a cool place, they will have much less tendency to coil. So, are you telling us that Dave must bring a stove to stream side to heat water to straighten his leaders after it has been stored for awhile on his reel, or in its package, and then he has to "keep them in a cool place"? I suggest in addition to the stove to heat the water that he also bring along a cooler with dry ice to store his leaders in. *Millions* of flyfishers have straightened their leaders with their fingers for *at least 60 years* (when I began flyfishing). I know not a soul who has heated them streamside or stored them on his body in a cool place. Bottom line: If Dave can not straighten his leaders with his fingers *like everyone else does*, and like he has done in the past, he should return the leaders from whence they came, and ask for newer ones. He has already stated that the packaging "was different" or words to that effect. Millions of people, for hundreds of years believed the earth was flat., or that the sun moved around the earth. Just because a lot of people believe or do something does not make it right or sensible. Now if you donīt mind I have had more than enough bull**** for today, so I will hie me hence and engage in more productive endeavours. MC |
Newbie leader question
"Larry L" wrote in message ... As for landing trout on 7X, I landed quite a few honestly over 20" without problem Still water or river? You're pretty good Larry. You got to be using a full flex fly-rod? I lost a good size leopard trout in Alaska when the 5x tippet snapped with a sudden turn of the head. Had a full flex bamboo rod even. At first I thought I hooked a Salmon, until it came out of the water. I have used 6x tippet, but I don't think I would ever use 7x tippet on a river. -tom |
Newbie leader question
On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 09:51:04 -0800, Mike
wrote: Mr. Kistner, you may of course do as you please, you can even listen to these idiots if you wish, but if you want any more advice on fly- fishing from me, then send me an e-mail. I just canīīt be bothered with these dumbos any more. Well, he's finally learned your name, Dave. Took him awhile. You used to be OP. d;o) Translation of above: "I can not compete with them because they are right. Straighten out your leader with hot water, but one you coil it up again, the coiled memory will return. I have no solution to uncoil it streamside." Who do you wanna trust, Dave? A clown that has learned much about flyfishing but has never actually used it streamside, or a bunch of assholes who fish hurdred of days a year and can answer any question simply because they have lived the same experience. Dave |
Newbie leader question
On 14 Nov, 19:11, Dave LaCourse wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 09:44:31 -0800, Mike wrote: If the material is "kinked" then it has been deformed beyond its intrinsic memory capacity to recover. There is no way to straighten such a kink completely, because the nylon has lost its memory at that point. We were talking about "coils", not kinks. You are correct. My bad. I meant coils, not kinks. You people are sometimes so stupid that itīs painful to obse Pure bull****. Hey, Mike. You know what Gehrke would do if dropping the leader in hot water was the only way to straighten it? He'd design a streamside heater of some kind. Now's your chance, Bunkie, to outdo the Ginkster. d;o) I did not say that was the only way to straighten it LaCourse, I said it was the easiest and most effective, which it is. Bye bye dumbo. MC |
Newbie leader question
On Nov 14, 10:12 am, "Tom Nakashima" wrote:
"Scott Seidman" wrote in message Of course, one could just draw the leader through one's fingers. Scott Agree with Scott, what most anglers do when on location. I'll third that. I have one of those "leader straightener" things that I'll use sometimes on a stubburn piece, but usually just a firm squeeze with the fingers will do the trick. Using fingers has the added benefit of giving you tactile feedback as to the friction warmth being generated. The caution is that you do need to ease up as you progress down to the thinner sections. I confess to snapping more than one perfectly good leader by holding just a bit too tightly. Joe F. |
Newbie leader question
Mike wrote:
I did not say that was the only way to straighten it LaCourse, I said it was the easiest and most effective, which it is. Well, that much we can agree on. Placing a leader in very hot water, your advice, *is* an easy and most effective way to straighten it. Unfortunately, it is also an easy and most effective way to trash it. There is a very good reason for never getting your leader any hotter than your bare fingers can tolerate. Bye bye dumbo. Ah, you handle disagreement so well, I wonder why experienced fly fishermen consider you a laughingstock ? -- Ken Fortenberry |
Newbie leader question
Tom Nakashima wrote:
"BJ Conner" wrote in message oups.com... Just store your leader in an ANSI 45.2 level III facility and it will stay in good condition. Haven't heard an ANSI term for quite awhile outside of work. We're ANSI Y14.5M Dimensioning & Tolerancing. -tom Has ANSI been supplanted by ISO? -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Newbie leader question
"rb608" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 14, 10:12 am, "Tom Nakashima" wrote: "Scott Seidman" wrote in message Of course, one could just draw the leader through one's fingers. Scott Agree with Scott, what most anglers do when on location. I'll third that. I have one of those "leader straightener" things that I'll use sometimes on a stubburn piece, but usually just a firm squeeze with the fingers will do the trick. Using fingers has the added benefit of giving you tactile feedback as to the friction warmth being generated. The caution is that you do need to ease up as you progress down to the thinner sections. I confess to snapping more than one perfectly good leader by holding just a bit too tightly. Joe F. One of the funniest things I've seen on leader straightening. One cold winter morning we were on the Trinity River, CA. We were rigging our fly-rods, when my friend zips open his polar vest, grabs a leader from around his neck which went all the way through his underwear and down his right pant leg. Guess that was enough heat to straighten anything. -tom |
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