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![]() "Peter Charles" wrote in message ... On Sun, 17 Oct 2004 15:48:53 GMT, wrote: Heavy mono and loops or braided loops with the fly line tip pushed into the overlapped section and the nail knotted to the fly line (never trust the heat shrink tube). I use one nail knot right at the end of the braid for trout and two nail knots for heavier fish. If a loop system, on the end of a spey line, can turn over a 15' mono leader and big fly, when cast into the wind, then the hinge theory is truly BS. It does and it is. Um, I'm not defending the "hinge theory," but assuming it has some merit, it would be easier to present a larger (and heavier) fly... Larger is not always heavier -- low water salmon hooks are quite light for their size. A full dressed fly on them is quite wind resistant without a lot of mass. Anyway, yesterday while practicing, I was casting a "fluffy" (egg yarn on the end of the tippet) into a stiff wind and it turned over OK. Hmm, a corollary to rejecting the Hinge Theory then might be to reject the philosophy of not jumping tippet weights too drastically, then. The Hinge Theory (as I recently gathered) isn't saying that the two loops will cause a hinge where they interact (that is BS, imho), but its saying that if you don't seat your line deeply enough into the base of the loop, that few centimeters of flimsy material will make a 360-degree hinge and screw up your casts. The philosophy of not skipping too many tippet weights is supposed to be for the same reason. I learned that, when you tie on a tippet, to push the two different sides together and make the tippet curl in a section including the knot. If the weights are not too far apart, the two pieces will both curve and you'll have a nice semicircle. If one is too thin, then it will 'hinge' at the knot, and the result is that the tippet won't turn over correctly. Is this also BS? --riverman |
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