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#1
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What is a good line for a spinning reel. I curently have 12 lb test mono on
my reel and am experiencing some major line twisting in no time at all..... Mike (PA) |
#2
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Hey Mike (PA),
Are you using a quality mono line? If you are, maybe you wound it on your reel in the wrong direction. If you have access to a boat, let the line out behind it as your traveling and then reel it back up. That usually gets the twists out. If that doesn't help, go to a bait shop and have them put your line on the reel. They will probably put it on using a grinder looking machine. If you are not using a quality line, change the line and watch how you reel it on the reel. Take a few cranks and watch the line. If it twists, lay the spool over so the line comes off in the opposite direction. Good luck! Halon "Mike" wrote in message ... What is a good line for a spinning reel. I curently have 12 lb test mono on my reel and am experiencing some major line twisting in no time at all..... Mike (PA) |
#3
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![]() "Mike" wrote in message ... What is a good line for a spinning reel. I curently have 12 lb test mono on my reel and am experiencing some major line twisting in no time at all..... Mike (PA) This has been asked so many times I wonder if maybe we shouldn't add it to the ROFB FAQ First off spinning reels twist line. No matter what you do you will get some line twist, however, that being said there are some things you can do. 1. Make sure you put the line on the reel without twisting it. Most guys lay the spool ont he ground and let the line loop off one side. After a half dozen cranks they will lower the rod and see if the line twists. If it does they will turn the spool over. 2. When retrieving close the bail by hand, lift the rod to take up slack, and then begin reeling. 3. Use the drag properly or learn to back wind. Do not attempt to crank while the drag is slipping. 4. Rig your baits so they don't spin on retrieve. If they do consider the use of a high quality ball bearing swivel. 5. Finally if you do get line twist you can get it out by spooling it off the reel and dragging it behind the boat for a while then reeling it back in. If that isn't an option you can get most of the twist out on land by tying a quality swivel on the end of the line and then hooking the swivel onto a fixed opbject. Then back away keepign the line off the ground. When you get most of the line off the reel snap the line tight several times letting it go slightly slack(but not touching the ground) in between each pull. 6. Believe it or not higher quality lines seem to work better and accumulate less line twist. I don't know why unles its simply that those people who spend a little more on line tend to take a little more care when fishign as well. Ther eis no other reason I can figure for that. -- Bob La Londe Win a Tackle Pack Jig Fishing - Tips and Techniques Contest Courtesy of Siebler Custom Baits http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
#4
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![]() "Bob La Londe" wrote in message SNIP This has been asked so many times I wonder if maybe we shouldn't add it to the ROFB FAQ First off spinning reels twist line. No matter what you do you will get some line twist, however, that being said there are some things you can do. 1. Make sure you put the line on the reel without twisting it. Most guys lay the spool ont he ground and let the line loop off one side. After a half dozen cranks they will lower the rod and see if the line twists. If it does they will turn the spool over. 2. When retrieving close the bail by hand, lift the rod to take up slack, and then begin reeling. 3. Use the drag properly or learn to back wind. Do not attempt to crank while the drag is slipping. 4. Rig your baits so they don't spin on retrieve. If they do consider the use of a high quality ball bearing swivel. 5. Finally if you do get line twist you can get it out by spooling it off the reel and dragging it behind the boat for a while then reeling it back in. If that isn't an option you can get most of the twist out on land by tying a quality swivel on the end of the line and then hooking the swivel onto a fixed opbject. Then back away keepign the line off the ground. When you get most of the line off the reel snap the line tight several times letting it go slightly slack(but not touching the ground) in between each pull. 6. Believe it or not higher quality lines seem to work better and accumulate less line twist. I don't know why unles its simply that those people who spend a little more on line tend to take a little more care when fishign as well. Ther eis no other reason I can figure for that. Those are all good tips, however there are just some reels that are highly prone to line twist. I had a couple of a certain brand that were terrible for line twist, regardless of what I did. I do know how to set a drag, I know how to backreel, I use primarily PowerPro line which is fairly twist tolerable and 90% of the time, I do close the bail by hand and pick up the slack. -- Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
#5
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![]() "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in message ... "Bob La Londe" wrote in message SNIP This has been asked so many times I wonder if maybe we shouldn't add it to the ROFB FAQ First off spinning reels twist line. No matter what you do you will get some line twist, however, that being said there are some things you can do. 1. Make sure you put the line on the reel without twisting it. Most guys lay the spool ont he ground and let the line loop off one side. After a half dozen cranks they will lower the rod and see if the line twists. If it does they will turn the spool over. 2. When retrieving close the bail by hand, lift the rod to take up slack, and then begin reeling. 3. Use the drag properly or learn to back wind. Do not attempt to crank while the drag is slipping. 4. Rig your baits so they don't spin on retrieve. If they do consider the use of a high quality ball bearing swivel. 5. Finally if you do get line twist you can get it out by spooling it off the reel and dragging it behind the boat for a while then reeling it back in. If that isn't an option you can get most of the twist out on land by tying a quality swivel on the end of the line and then hooking the swivel onto a fixed opbject. Then back away keepign the line off the ground. When you get most of the line off the reel snap the line tight several times letting it go slightly slack(but not touching the ground) in between each pull. 6. Believe it or not higher quality lines seem to work better and accumulate less line twist. I don't know why unles its simply that those people who spend a little more on line tend to take a little more care when fishign as well. Ther eis no other reason I can figure for that. Those are all good tips, however there are just some reels that are highly prone to line twist. I had a couple of a certain brand that were terrible for line twist, regardless of what I did. I do know how to set a drag, I know how to backreel, I use primarily PowerPro line which is fairly twist tolerable and 90% of the time, I do close the bail by hand and pick up the slack. I have noticed that spinning reels with a better balance (don't throb on retrieve)and reels with a large line take up roller seem to be a little better than others. -- Bob La Londe Win a Tackle Pack Jig Fishing - Tips and Techniques Contest Courtesy of Siebler Custom Baits http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
#6
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![]() Bob La Londe wrote: ...... First off spinning reels twist line. No matter what you do you will get some line twist, however, that being said there are some things you can do....... 2. When retrieving close the bail by hand........ OK, I asked about this about a year ago with no takers. I'm a mechanical kinda guy, and I always have to figure out the mechanics of how things work. I cannot for the life of me see how closing the bail by hand reduces line twist over cranking the handle to close the bail. I have examined very closely how the line is taken up in either instance, and there is no twist added to the line. I can see advantages to reel life, or maybe preventing a take-up problem where you have so much loose line at the reel that it can get tangled in the handle or the bail, but no line twist. I think this is a myth that someone started and everybody keeps it alive by beleiving it without checking for themselves. Take a spinning reel and paint one side of your line with a marker so you can see any twisting being added. Open and close the reel both manually and automatically. Observe the line. There is no difference. |
#7
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I've always wondered about the same thing Henry. I've asked the question
before but never received an explanation that was satisfactory. "Henry Hefner" wrote in message oups.com... Bob La Londe wrote: ..... First off spinning reels twist line. No matter what you do you will get some line twist, however, that being said there are some things you can do....... 2. When retrieving close the bail by hand........ OK, I asked about this about a year ago with no takers. I'm a mechanical kinda guy, and I always have to figure out the mechanics of how things work. I cannot for the life of me see how closing the bail by hand reduces line twist over cranking the handle to close the bail. I have examined very closely how the line is taken up in either instance, and there is no twist added to the line. I can see advantages to reel life, or maybe preventing a take-up problem where you have so much loose line at the reel that it can get tangled in the handle or the bail, but no line twist. I think this is a myth that someone started and everybody keeps it alive by beleiving it without checking for themselves. Take a spinning reel and paint one side of your line with a marker so you can see any twisting being added. Open and close the reel both manually and automatically. Observe the line. There is no difference. |
#8
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![]() "Mike" wrote in message ... What is a good line for a spinning reel. I curently have 12 lb test mono on my reel and am experiencing some major line twisting in no time at all..... I agree with Steve; I've owned perhaps 25 spinning reels and maybe a half-dozen of them twisted line badly, regardless of what I did. A good line for a spinning reel has low memory and handles easily. Two lines that I use that qualify are Trilene XL and Original Stren. Line problems are minimized when the reel spool has a large diameter relative to the line size. If you're using 12# on, say, a 2000 size reel, going to a 4000 might help. Just last year I discovered that a new reel was one of those that twisted line. I wanted to continue using that reel, so I followed advice I received and replaced 10# mono with 14# Fireline. That stuff does not twist, period, but it is subject to the other problems of loose line and tangles, but that's easier to control than bad twist. Good luck. |
#9
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I landed a 36 inch Muskie during the practice for the NWC on 10 lb Power
Pro. It took a LONG time but the line held and I "Got er Done". The rod was an old fiber glass rod I got in junior high and was restored by our own "Rodmaker" Dave Norton. The reel was a Mitchel Copperhead. Doc ================================================== ============================== "Mike" wrote in message ... What is a good line for a spinning reel. I curently have 12 lb test mono on my reel and am experiencing some major line twisting in no time at all..... Mike (PA) |
#10
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![]() Doc Nice fish - well done! Jim On Mon, 29 Aug 2005 22:54:29 GMT, " Bill & Sue" wrote: I landed a 36 inch Muskie during the practice for the NWC on 10 lb Power Pro. It took a LONG time but the line held and I "Got er Done". The rod was an old fiber glass rod I got in junior high and was restored by our own "Rodmaker" Dave Norton. The reel was a Mitchel Copperhead. Doc ================================================= =============================== "Mike" wrote in message ... What is a good line for a spinning reel. I curently have 12 lb test mono on my reel and am experiencing some major line twisting in no time at all..... Mike (PA) |
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