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-   -   knot strength? (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=2839)

steve November 1st, 2003 05:30 AM

knot strength?
 
How strong is a nail knot (tied with a knot tieing tool)? It seems
significantly stronger than a fishermans knot. In fact, many times if I
try to break off the fly instead of breaking at the knot it breaks in
the middle of the leader!!

(ps, anyone familiar with sabre poles? I have a golden sabre 6/7 8 foot
pole that I want info on)

Rodney November 1st, 2003 06:06 AM

knot strength?
 
steve wrote:
How strong is a nail knot (tied with a knot tieing tool)? It seems
significantly stronger than a fishermans knot. In fact, many times if I
try to break off the fly instead of breaking at the knot it breaks in
the middle of the leader!!


If pulled up right, it is stronger than the line

Check my site for other applications of the "nail" knot
http://ezknot.com/Frontpage.htm
I sell the cheapest nail knot tool there is, price is now just a buck

--
Rodney Long,
Inventor of the Boomerang Fishing Pro. , Straight Up Hooks ,
Straight Up Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights,
and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com


JR November 1st, 2003 06:44 AM

knot strength?
 
Rodney, Inventor, wrote:

I sell the cheapest nail knot tool there is, price is now just a buck.


Being a traditional literalist (literal traditionalist?), I use a nail,
which I'm pretty sure cost less than that.

JR

Chas Wade November 1st, 2003 07:20 AM

knot strength?
 
JR wrote:
Rodney, Inventor, wrote:

I sell the cheapest nail knot tool there is, price is now just a
buck.


Being a traditional literalist (literal traditionalist?), I use a nail,
which I'm pretty sure cost less than that.

It's easy enough to douoble the line back on itself and use the line as
the "nail". This reduces the price of the tool to zero.

Chas
remove fly fish to reply
http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html


Tim Lysyk November 1st, 2003 02:19 PM

knot strength?
 
Ah yes, the old "nailess" nail knot. That is how I tie my leader to
flyline. Costs nothing to do, never fails, easy to learn, never hinges
during casting, and has a certain elegance that would satsify even the the
elitest of the elitists.

Tim Lysyk
timlysyk at telus dot net

"Chas Wade" wrote in message
news:r9Job.74266$HS4.643789@attbi_s01...
JR wrote:
Rodney, Inventor, wrote:

I sell the cheapest nail knot tool there is, price is now just a
buck.


Being a traditional literalist (literal traditionalist?), I use a nail,
which I'm pretty sure cost less than that.

It's easy enough to douoble the line back on itself and use the line as
the "nail". This reduces the price of the tool to zero.

Chas
remove fly fish to reply
http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html




Sierra fisher November 1st, 2003 02:48 PM

knot strength?
 
You guys are too tough. My local fly shop sells a similar tool for $5. If
your time is worth a few cents per hour (half of you may qualify), this
thing would pay out.
"Tim Lysyk" wrote in message
news:hiPob.102109$EO3.55096@clgrps13...
Ah yes, the old "nailess" nail knot. That is how I tie my leader to
flyline. Costs nothing to do, never fails, easy to learn, never hinges
during casting, and has a certain elegance that would satsify even the the
elitest of the elitists.

Tim Lysyk
timlysyk at telus dot net

"Chas Wade" wrote in message
news:r9Job.74266$HS4.643789@attbi_s01...
JR wrote:
Rodney, Inventor, wrote:

I sell the cheapest nail knot tool there is, price is now just a
buck.

Being a traditional literalist (literal traditionalist?), I use a nail,
which I'm pretty sure cost less than that.

It's easy enough to douoble the line back on itself and use the line as
the "nail". This reduces the price of the tool to zero.

Chas
remove fly fish to reply
http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html





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rw November 1st, 2003 05:20 PM

knot strength?
 
Sierra fisher wrote:
You guys are too tough. My local fly shop sells a similar tool for $5. If
your time is worth a few cents per hour (half of you may qualify), this
thing would pay out.


Bruiser gave me (and others at a San Juan Clave) a nail-knot tool that
works great and probably costs less than a buck. It's one of those
needle-like nozzles you use to blow up basketballs and such, with the
tip of the tube ground off.

--
Cut "to the chase" for my email address.


Bill Mason November 1st, 2003 06:33 PM

knot strength?
 

"rw" wrote in message
m...

Bruiser gave me (and others at a San Juan Clave) a nail-knot tool that
works great and probably costs less than a buck. It's one of those
needle-like nozzles you use to blow up basketballs and such, with the
tip of the tube ground off.


....and a couple of swipes with a razor blade to a 1 ml pipet tip make a tool
that allows me to tie very quick and easy nail-knots. God, I'm cheap.

Cheers,
Bill



riverman November 2nd, 2003 04:49 PM

knot strength?
 

"Bill Mason" wrote in message
et...

"rw" wrote in message
m...

Bruiser gave me (and others at a San Juan Clave) a nail-knot tool that
works great and probably costs less than a buck. It's one of those
needle-like nozzles you use to blow up basketballs and such, with the
tip of the tube ground off.


...and a couple of swipes with a razor blade to a 1 ml pipet tip make a

tool
that allows me to tie very quick and easy nail-knots. God, I'm cheap.



I use the little red tube that comes with a can of WD40. I cut off a 1/4"
piece to leave in the nozzle, and the remainder gets cut in half for nail
knot tools.

--riverman
(If we're using tubes instead of nails, we ought to call it a tube knot,
wot?)



Svend Tang-Petersen November 3rd, 2003 07:07 PM

knot strength?
 

I think the nail knot is only an 80% strength knot. I use loop-loop both to
backing and leader.

Went to a Bill Nash seminar on knots and got a pretty good demonstration of
how 'good' the
standard knots are. Most of them are between 80-90% and some are less.
Probably doesnt matter
too much if you use heavy gear for light fishing. But go for some of the
agressive sal****er spieces,
stripers or any big fish (or small fish on light gear) and you are quickly in
trouble. A typical sign
of a week knot is a curly leader at the point where it broke.

Tim Lysyk wrote:

Ah yes, the old "nailess" nail knot. That is how I tie my leader to
flyline. Costs nothing to do, never fails, easy to learn, never hinges
during casting, and has a certain elegance that would satsify even the the
elitest of the elitists.

Tim Lysyk
timlysyk at telus dot net

"Chas Wade" wrote in message
news:r9Job.74266$HS4.643789@attbi_s01...
JR wrote:
Rodney, Inventor, wrote:

I sell the cheapest nail knot tool there is, price is now just a
buck.

Being a traditional literalist (literal traditionalist?), I use a nail,
which I'm pretty sure cost less than that.

It's easy enough to douoble the line back on itself and use the line as
the "nail". This reduces the price of the tool to zero.

Chas
remove fly fish to reply
http://home.comcast.net/~chas.wade/w...ome.html-.html


--

Svend

************************************************** *****************
Svend Tang-Petersen, MSc Email: svend AT sgi.com
SGI Pager: svend_p AT pager.sgi.com
1600 Amphitheatre Pkwy Phone: (+1) 650 933 3618
Mountain View
California 94043
USA
************************************************** *****************





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