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Jarmo Hurri wrote:
JR One of the best examples of how the industry is f***ing up the JR sport in order to sell more stuff is the line manufacturers' JR screwing with line weights (i.e., producing lines whose first 30 JR ft is not standard). I'm curious: which manufacturers/lines no longer adhere to the standards? The one I know of is Scientific Anglers GPX (a 4wt line is in reality something like 4.5wt). Good question. The GPX is the line most folks know deviates from the standard, because SA has been pretty up front about it (sorry, couldn't resist g). A lot of new lines are being put on the market with remarks from the makers about the front part of the line being somehow different from the "norm", but with no actual specs on the weight. Consider this from Cortland: http://www.cortlandline.com/technical/444_specs.html Note that the specs for all the old 444 lines have info on the actual AFTMA line weight (±140 grams for the first 30 ft of a 5wt, for example). For the "NEW" lines, though, i.e., the 444 Tropic Plus Lazer Redfish and the 444 Classic Sylk (sic, God help us), there is only info on the tapers, nothing about weight. The same seems to be true for Sage and SA; you won't find much about the actual weight of their lines. My own view is that after having hoodwinked a large portion of those new to the sport into believing that as you become a "better" caster, you will (and should) inevitably want to cast farther and you will (and should) therefore want to "progress" to faster, usually more expensive, rods in order to do so. Problem is most fast rods are so stiff they don't load properly with less than a whole lot of line out. So the chumps, er, customers end up with rods they can't cast worth a damn at the distances 90% of us fish 90% of the time. Hence the need for six-weight lines labeled as fives, fours labeled as threes, etc. I've heard (and read on the web) rumors that some of the new "delicate presentation" lines are lighter than the AFTMA norm, but I can't now remember which ones. That would be particularly odd if true since they would cast particularly poorly at close range. In any event, once the line weight standard goes out the window, a line is only a five-weight because the manufacturer says it is, and matching a "5wt" line with a "5wt" rod becomes a crap shoot, an exercise in trial and error, which is of course not a bad thing for the line companies. JR |
#2
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![]() JR A lot of new lines are being put on the market with remarks from JR the makers about the front part of the line being somehow JR different from the "norm", but with no actual specs on the weight. JR Consider this from Cortland: JR http://www.cortlandline.com/technical/444_specs.html JR Note that the specs for all the old 444 lines have info on the JR actual AFTMA line weight (±140 grams for the first 30 ft of a 5wt, JR for example). For the "NEW" lines, though, i.e., the 444 Tropic JR Plus Lazer Redfish and the 444 Classic Sylk (sic, God help us), JR there is only info on the tapers, nothing about weight. The same JR seems to be true for Sage and SA; you won't find much about the JR actual weight of their lines. Good point. What we will soon need is some fanatic who will actually weigh new lines and publish the results on a web page for comparison. Pretty much insane - we already had the standard. I think that my next new line will be one of the old 444's - just to support lines with known ratings... -- Jarmo Hurri Commercial email countermeasures included in header email address. Remove all garbage from header email address when replying, or just use . |
#3
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In article ,
Jarmo Hurri wrote: JR A lot of new lines are being put on the market with remarks from JR the makers about the front part of the line being somehow JR different from the "norm", but with no actual specs on the weight. JR Consider this from Cortland: JR http://www.cortlandline.com/technical/444_specs.html JR Note that the specs for all the old 444 lines have info on the JR actual AFTMA line weight (±140 grams for the first 30 ft of a 5wt, JR for example). For the "NEW" lines, though, i.e., the 444 Tropic JR Plus Lazer Redfish and the 444 Classic Sylk (sic, God help us), JR there is only info on the tapers, nothing about weight. The same JR seems to be true for Sage and SA; you won't find much about the JR actual weight of their lines. Good point. What we will soon need is some fanatic who will actually weigh new lines and publish the results on a web page for comparison. Pretty much insane - we already had the standard. I think that my next new line will be one of the old 444's - just to support lines with known ratings... My local fly fishing dealer (I live in Europe) says the Gary LaFontaine's Delicate Presentation Line is the best invention since sliced bread. Cortland 444 is old news. Do you happen to know this line? |
#4
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William H.M. Wood wrote:
My local fly fishing dealer (I live in Europe) says the Gary LaFontaine's Delicate Presentation Line is the best invention since sliced bread. Cortland 444 is old news. Do you happen to know this line? I'm not familiar with that line, but your local fly fishing dealer sounds like a fine salesman. :-) -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#5
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![]() William My local fly fishing dealer (I live in Europe) says the Gary William LaFontaine's Delicate Presentation Line is the best invention William since sliced bread. Cortland 444 is old news. William Do you happen to know this line? It's a WF line, so that's a definite no-no for me. Besides, the point was that we at least know the true rating of a 444, whereas for other lines it seems to be more or less a gamble these days. Certainly not something to lose your sleep over, but might still be worth voting with your money. :-) -- Jarmo Hurri Commercial email countermeasures included in header email address. Remove all garbage from header email address when replying, or just use . |
#6
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William H.M.Wood wrote:My local fly fishing dealer (I live in Europe) says the
Gary LaFontaine's Delicate Presentation Line is the best invention since sliced bread. Cortland 444 is old news. Do you happen to know this line? If you are talking about the one that is in a drab olive color I bought one of them when they first came out. It might be the answer if you fish primarily very small flies in something like spring creek conditions. I don't but once every five years or so. It does not work worth a damn with the heavily weighted flies that I use in size 8 or 10 for my bluegill fishing. When I fish for trout I seldom use flies smaller that a size 16 and I think that line excells for the smaller flies.Since I bought that line, I have bought five or six more of the old peach colored 444 lines in various sizes. I seldom cast more that 30 feet in my fishing, so I do not need the ability to cast very long distances.I also found that the drab olive color of that LaFontaine line was difficult to see at the longer distances. You might want to consider this. Big Dale |
#7
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On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 19:47:02 +0300, Jarmo Hurri
wrote: Good point. What we will soon need is some fanatic who will actually weigh new lines and publish the results on a web page for comparison. Pretty much insane - we already had the standard. I think that my next new line will be one of the old 444's - just to support lines with known ratings... No sympathy from this corner -- if you think regular lines are screwed up, you should try spey lines. One popular West Coast light spey rod casts both a Rio Windcutter 5/6 and a Hardy Mach 1 8/9 lines with equal ease as both lines weight about the same!!! It's chaos . . . Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
#8
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![]() Peter Charles wrote: On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 19:47:02 +0300, Jarmo Hurri wrote: Good point. What we will soon need is some fanatic who will actually weigh new lines and publish the results on a web page for comparison. Pretty much insane - we already had the standard. I think that my next new line will be one of the old 444's - just to support lines with known ratings... No sympathy from this corner -- if you think regular lines are screwed up, you should try spey lines. One popular West Coast light spey rod casts both a Rio Windcutter 5/6 and a Hardy Mach 1 8/9 lines with equal ease as both lines weight about the same!!! It's chaos . . . That sucks! When the line makers abandon the standard, you have to buy or try out a bunch of lines to find what's going to work for you. I'm going to buy those lines that still rate their lines by the standard. Hope at least some still stay that way. Willi |
#9
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On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 17:28:23 -0600, Willi wrote:
Peter Charles wrote: On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 19:47:02 +0300, Jarmo Hurri wrote: Good point. What we will soon need is some fanatic who will actually weigh new lines and publish the results on a web page for comparison. Pretty much insane - we already had the standard. I think that my next new line will be one of the old 444's - just to support lines with known ratings... No sympathy from this corner -- if you think regular lines are screwed up, you should try spey lines. One popular West Coast light spey rod casts both a Rio Windcutter 5/6 and a Hardy Mach 1 8/9 lines with equal ease as both lines weight about the same!!! It's chaos . . . That sucks! When the line makers abandon the standard, you have to buy or try out a bunch of lines to find what's going to work for you. I'm going to buy those lines that still rate their lines by the standard. Hope at least some still stay that way. Willi With spey lines, there never has been a standard -- they're working on it now. I've produced some charts to help this along. Since not all of line behind the rod is used to load it in a spey cast, that portion of the line used in the load, I've called "casting weight". I've suggested to the line makers that lines be rated according to their casting weight, based on an arbitrary standardized D-Loop. It's had a reasonable reception from SA so we'll see where we go from here. In case you're interested. It's dry stuff but it would useful for anyone interestied in spey casting. Incidentally, spey casts can be done with any spey rod. http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...tingweight.xls http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...texplained.pdf http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...eightmodel.pdf http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...weightuses.pdf http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...htvariance.xls Peter |
#10
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On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 20:08:54 -0400, Peter Charles
wrote: In case you're interested. It's dry stuff but it would useful for anyone interestied in spey casting. Incidentally, spey casts can be done with any spey rod. That was supposed to be "any fly rod". duh!! Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
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