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#1
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Physics of fishing
at http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20050...0210-5222r.htm -- Bob La Londe Win a Spinnerbait Tackle Kit Spinnerbait Tips & Tricks Contest Through the Month of September 2005 http://www.YumaBassMan.com |
#2
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Tungsten coated lines fishing at 60 foot depths? Okay, I'll bite. Anyone
else seen this? -- Frank Reid Euthanize to respond |
#3
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Frank Reid wrote:
Tungsten coated lines fishing at 60 foot depths? Okay, I'll bite. Anyone else seen this? Scientific Anglers uses tungsten powder in the coatings of its fast-sinking lines: http://www.3m.com/us/home_leisure/sc...superior.jhtml -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#4
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Physics of fishing
at http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20050...0210-5222r.htm " Ideally, the energy directs the fly to the target, he says. The most efficient way to accomplish that goal is through a straight line path of the rod tip. "If the rod tip doesn't travel in a straight line path during the cast, it either becomes convex or concave. A convex path of the rod tip creates a wide, inefficient loop." The rod tip becomes convex or concave? Wow! Aside from that second paragraph's being an example of damn poor writing (not extraordinary for the DC Times), the whole quotation is nonsense. I'll wager that there is no one in the entire world whose rod tip describes a straight line when he or she casts. Assuming the rod maintains a constant length during the cast, which is the case with most rods I've seen, the tip follows an arc, not a straight line. vince |
#5
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vincent p. norris wrote:
Physics of fishing at http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20050...0210-5222r.htm " Ideally, the energy directs the fly to the target, he says. The most efficient way to accomplish that goal is through a straight line path of the rod tip. "If the rod tip doesn't travel in a straight line path during the cast, it either becomes convex or concave. A convex path of the rod tip creates a wide, inefficient loop." The rod tip becomes convex or concave? Wow! Aside from that second paragraph's being an example of damn poor writing (not extraordinary for the DC Times), the whole quotation is nonsense. I'll wager that there is no one in the entire world whose rod tip describes a straight line when he or she casts. Assuming the rod maintains a constant length during the cast, which is the case with most rods I've seen, the tip follows an arc, not a straight line. vince Indeed it is a badly written mish-mash of an explanation. However in the casting stroke, backwards or forwards, the rod bends due to the mass of the rod and the mass of the fly line attached to it being accelerated. So the path of the tip is not a simple circular arc, but at a minimum will be flattened towards straight from such an arc due to that bend in the rod. All the well-known casting gurus, Lefty Kreh, Joan Wulff, Mel Krieger will tell you that the optimum rod tip path is a straight line, and there is plenty of video to back them up. If the cast is overpowered, the path will be concave and usually results in a tailing loop. If you try to cast a line that's too light for the rod you won't bend the rod enough, and get the convex path. If the line is to heavy, it will bend the rod too much during the stroke resulting in the concave path. Within limits though, these effects can be controlled with technique. But the worst thing about the article is that it dances around but doesn't really get at the essential physics of what makes a fly cast work. What it is, is that at the instant the loop is formed, the whole line is in motion and has a certain amount of kinetic enery. As the line rolls out, the energy that was in the part that goes static transfers to the moving part. In the absence of air resistance the speed of the moving part would continually increase due to this effect. It would theoretically go infinite just as the end of the line is reached. However among other things, the tensile strength of the line would be exceeded, and it would break before this happened. With air resistance there is a balance between the loss due to it and the transfer of energy from the static part, and the line unrolls at more-or-less constant speed. Narrow loops are preferred because less frontal area has less air resistance. Mike |
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Indeed it is a badly written mish-mash of an explanation.
Your response, OTOH, is very lucid. Well done! Not having seen any slo-mo films or videos of casting, I would guess, and did guess, that the rod would have about the same amount of bend--and thus effective length-- during most of the forward stroke. All the well-known casting gurus, Lefty Kreh, Joan Wulff, Mel Krieger will tell you that the optimum rod tip path is a straight line... Never had the opportunity to hear them say that, but I can see the logical reason for it. and there is plenty of video to back them up. Do you mean their rod tips actually describe a straight line? Seems to me, a priori, that with a given rod and line, only one length of cast (and therefore amount of casting effort) would achieve that. A longer cast, or a shorter cast, would produce different results. vince |
#7
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vincent p. norris wrote:
Do you mean their rod tips actually describe a straight line? Seems to me, a priori, that with a given rod and line, only one length of cast (and therefore amount of casting effort) would achieve that. A longer cast, or a shorter cast, would produce different results. The resistance of the line will make the rod tip tend toward a straight line. The more line is out, and the more mass is being accelerated, the stronger the tendency. It's all according to the principle of least action (which, by the way, is not the same "principle of least action" that the Bush administration is following in the aftermath of Katrina). -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#8
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Seems to me, a priori, that with a given rod and line, only one length
of cast (and therefore amount of casting effort) would achieve that. A longer cast, or a shorter cast, would produce different results. The resistance of the line will make the rod tip tend toward a straight line. The more line is out, and the more mass is being accelerated, the stronger the tendency. Yes, that's what I was trying to say. It's all according to the principle of least action... Never heard of that. Can you explain? That's not another name for Newton's First Law of Motion, is it? ((:-)) (which, by the way, is not the same "principle of least action" that the Bush administration is following in the aftermath of Katrina). No need to explain that one. vince |
#9
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vincent p. norris wrote:
It's all according to the principle of least action... Never heard of that. Can you explain? That's not another name for Newton's First Law of Motion, is it? ((:-)) The action principle in physics is independent of and far more general than Newton's Laws. It finds application not only in mechanics, but also in quantum field theory and general relativity. You can find many explanations with a Google search. Once you understand it (and it's subtle), Newton's Laws seem crude in comparison. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#10
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rw wrote:
vincent p. norris wrote: It's all according to the principle of least action... Never heard of that. Can you explain? That's not another name for Newton's First Law of Motion, is it? ((:-)) The action principle in physics is independent of and far more general than Newton's Laws. It finds application not only in mechanics, but also in quantum field theory and general relativity. You can find many explanations with a Google search. Once you understand it (and it's subtle), Newton's Laws seem crude in comparison. It's an elegant generalization but the concept wouldn't have arisen without quite a few "crude" examples. In this particular instance, I would say RW is talking about a different perspective on Newton's second law. Mike |
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