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Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
I called the Cabot Corporation, which manufactures Cab-o-Sil, to get
information about their products. They were amazed that fly fishermen were using this stuff for drying flies, and were kind enough to send me samples of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic products to test. (I now have several lifetimes' supply -- about two quarts of each.) The two kinds of Cab-o-Sil that I tested we M-5 untreated fumed silica, hydrophobic TS-720 treated fumed silica, hydrophilic The result in a nutshell is that the treated, hydrophobic TS-720 product is the one to use. The untreated, hydrophilic M-5 is worse than useless. It turns into a gooey mess when wet and causes the fly to sink. The TS-720 works great. After I dried a completely soaked fly with it, the fly floated better than even a fresh, untreated, completely dry fly. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
rw wrote:
I called the Cabot Corporation, which manufactures Cab-o-Sil, to get information about their products. They were amazed that fly fishermen were using this stuff for drying flies, and were kind enough to send me samples of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic products to test. (I now have several lifetimes' supply -- about two quarts of each.) The two kinds of Cab-o-Sil that I tested we M-5 untreated fumed silica, hydrophobic TS-720 treated fumed silica, hydrophilic Oops. Correction: The untreated M-5 is hydrophilic and the treated TS-720 is hydrophobic. The next paragraph is correct. The result in a nutshell is that the treated, hydrophobic TS-720 product is the one to use. The untreated, hydrophilic M-5 is worse than useless. It turns into a gooey mess when wet and causes the fly to sink. The TS-720 works great. After I dried a completely soaked fly with it, the fly floated better than even a fresh, untreated, completely dry fly. Use the hydrophobic stuff. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
rw wrote:
rw wrote: The result in a nutshell is that the treated, hydrophobic TS-720 product is the one to use. The untreated, hydrophilic M-5 is worse than useless. It turns into a gooey mess when wet and causes the fly to sink. The TS-720 works great. After I dried a completely soaked fly with it, the fly floated better than even a fresh, untreated, completely dry fly. Use the hydrophobic stuff. So Dickie Dean was right. Credit where credit's due. -- Ken Fortenberry |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
Dang that's awesome. Save me some of the hydrophobic, which I could
never find. My big jars are (were) hydrophilic. I'd also like the instructions for ordering hydrophobic Cab-O-Sil in retail quantities. Hopefully they'll send you a Cab-O-Sil shirt too! bh |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
"bruiser" wrote in message oups.com... Dang that's awesome. Save me some of the hydrophobic, which I could never find. My big jars are (were) hydrophilic. I'd also like the instructions for ordering hydrophobic Cab-O-Sil in retail quantities. Hopefully they'll send you a Cab-O-Sil shirt too! bh What is Cab-O-Sil used for and where do you get it? |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
Ken Fortenberry wrote:
rw wrote: rw wrote: The result in a nutshell is that the treated, hydrophobic TS-720 product is the one to use. The untreated, hydrophilic M-5 is worse than useless. It turns into a gooey mess when wet and causes the fly to sink. The TS-720 works great. After I dried a completely soaked fly with it, the fly floated better than even a fresh, untreated, completely dry fly. Use the hydrophobic stuff. So Dickie Dean was right. Credit where credit's due. He was right that there are two different kinds, but he never to my knowledge said which was the right kind. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
"JakBQuik" wrote in message ... "bruiser" wrote in message oups.com... Dang that's awesome. Save me some of the hydrophobic, which I could never find. My big jars are (were) hydrophilic. I'd also like the instructions for ordering hydrophobic Cab-O-Sil in retail quantities. Hopefully they'll send you a Cab-O-Sil shirt too! bh What is Cab-O-Sil used for and where do you get it? http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...=Google+Search |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
bruiser wrote:
Dang that's awesome. Save me some of the hydrophobic, which I could never find. I could send you some if you can't wait until we meet up in Alaska. (You won't be using much Cab-o-Sil in Alaska.) My big jars are (were) hydrophilic. Jesus. I hope you haven't been using it. I'd also like the instructions for ordering hydrophobic Cab-O-Sil in retail quantities. Well, you can call Cabot, tell them something interesting about their product that comes as a big surprise to them, and get them to send you a huge bottle, but I beat you to it. :-) Hopefully they'll send you a Cab-O-Sil shirt too! bh I'll ask my contact at Cabot. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
After playing around with this hydrophobic fumed silicon (Cab-o-Sil
TS-720) I've changed the way I look at this substance. It can be used as a "fly-drying" agent, which is how I've been using it, and it works very well for that, but it's also a "waterproofing" agent. The treated fly floats better than the dry untreated fly. That's because hydrophobic (water-resisting) particles embedded in the fly repel water molecules. To get maximum floating performance I'd do this: 1. Treat the fly before fishing it, while it's dry. Immerse the fly in fumed silicon, twirl it around, rub the particles in, and blow away the excess. Repeat. 2. After the fly gets wet use a stiff brush to push the substance into the fly. Use a lot, to excess. The brush that comes in a Frog's Fanny bottle works great. The substance will push the water to the surface where it can be shaken off with false casts. Repeat. A few points: 1. You'll use a lot of the agent this way, so for this to be economical you need cheap treated fumed silicon, not Frog's Fanny or its imitators. 2. If you want a low-floating fly don't use treated fumed silicon on a heavily hackled fly. 3. This stuff changes the status quo for tying dry flies. You can tie very sparse patterns with hydrophilic (water attracting) materials and still get the fly to float if it traps fumed silicon particles. It could even be incorporated into recipes. For example, you could mix it into the dubbing and tie it into the body. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Cab-o-Sil -- which type to use?
rw wrote:
After playing around with this hydrophobic fumed silicon (Cab-o-Sil TS-720) For "silicon" substitute "silica" (SiO2). -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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