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#1
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I have noticed these two are very inexpensive. Maxima 4 lb mono was
around $2 for 27 yards, and berkely vanish was about $4.50 for 100 yards. In my mind that makes the berkely flouro cheaper than mono, yet flouro is supposed to be so much more money?? |
#2
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On Fri, 04 Jun 2004 07:28:14 GMT, Steve Sullivan
wrote: I have noticed these two are very inexpensive. Maxima 4 lb mono was around $2 for 27 yards, and berkely vanish was about $4.50 for 100 yards. In my mind that makes the berkely flouro cheaper than mono, yet flouro is supposed to be so much more money?? When I was in Maine a couple years ago the guy at the Dover fly shop set me up with a 100 yard spool of Berkley flouro to use as my striper leader. And you're right, it did cost about half as much as the 30 yard spools of "fly fishing" flouro tippet material. g.c. |
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#4
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I also use Berkly Vanquish the past couple of years for tippet with great
success. Mike "Kevin Vang" wrote in message t... In article , says... When I was in Maine a couple years ago the guy at the Dover fly shop set me up with a 100 yard spool of Berkley flouro to use as my striper leader. And you're right, it did cost about half as much as the 30 yard spools of "fly fishing" flouro tippet material. Also, you can buy braided dacron "trolling line" in 250 yard spools for about the same price as 50 yard spools of flyline backing, which is suspiciously similar looking. Kevin |
#5
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![]() " Steve Sullivan wrote: "In my mind that makes the berkely flouro cheaper than mono, yet flouro is supposed to be so much more money??" I've been using Vanish as a tippet material for three years now. It is, indeed, much less expensive than most other tippet choices. There is an on-line e-zine that did a comparison and the Vanish didn't stand up well to the likes of Frog Hair and Seaguar flourocarbon, but it is about 1/10 the price. That said, the review mentions that Vanish has a tendency to slip or break at knots. This is true in my experience. You must be very deliberate in tying your knots. I use the Vanish for anything sub-surface. Like all flourocarbons it will sink a dry fly. It is heavier than water. I use mostly 4lb, 6lb, 8lb and 10lb for streamer and nymph fishing and, for the most part, like it a lot. In situations where I need supple material I use Orvis Superstrong (an excellent tippet material IMHO) and also for dry flies and deer hair bugs. YMMV JC |
#6
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Yes fluor. will sink a dry fly..eventually. However, I have been taught
that a sunk tippet is much more difficult for the fish to see than one in the film. some years ago, our FF club had a visitor from England who was some sort of fishing champ, and he recommended sinking the tippet, at least just before the fly. He recommended putting Sink or some other surface tension reducer on 3 or 4 inches of the tippetj ust before the fly. I'm a bit lazy so I fish mostly parachutes that don't sink easily, and fluoro tippet. I don't find that sinking the fly is a problem, but that is also partly a function of how I fish dry flies; I don't strip them, and recast a lot. -- --------------------------------------------------------------------- "Are you still wasting your time with spam?... There is a solution!" Protected by GIANT Company's Spam Inspector The most powerful anti-spam software available. http://mail.spaminspector.com "Cornmuse" wrote in message news ![]() " Steve Sullivan wrote: "In my mind that makes the berkely flouro cheaper than mono, yet flouro is supposed to be so much more money??" I've been using Vanish as a tippet material for three years now. It is, indeed, much less expensive than most other tippet choices. There is an on-line e-zine that did a comparison and the Vanish didn't stand up well to the likes of Frog Hair and Seaguar flourocarbon, but it is about 1/10 the price. That said, the review mentions that Vanish has a tendency to slip or break at knots. This is true in my experience. You must be very deliberate in tying your knots. I use the Vanish for anything sub-surface. Like all flourocarbons it will sink a dry fly. It is heavier than water. I use mostly 4lb, 6lb, 8lb and 10lb for streamer and nymph fishing and, for the most part, like it a lot. In situations where I need supple material I use Orvis Superstrong (an excellent tippet material IMHO) and also for dry flies and deer hair bugs. YMMV JC |
#7
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Steve Sullivan wrote in news:none-D2815F.00285704062004
@news.sf.sbcglobal.net: yet flouro is supposed to be so much more money?? There are flouros and there are flouros. Some are flouro coated mono (usually the cheaper ones) while others are flouro through and through. I use the Berkely a lot ... from 4 - 12 lb in fresh and sal****er, dry flys (to a point) and wet. Steve |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Berkley buys Stren? | Charles Summers | Bass Fishing | 14 | February 28th, 2004 12:46 AM |