PLEASE NOTE: In order to post on the Board you need to have registered. To register please email paul@sexyloops.com including your real name and username. Registration takes less than 24hrs, unless Paul is fishing deep in the jungle!
Thinner Lines = higher speed
Moderator: Torsten
Thinner Lines = higher speed
I thought it was only for the hot potato owners club and was thinking of spraying a glass rod white.
“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius — and a lot of courage — to move in the opposite direction.” — Ernst F. Schumacher
https://www.sexyloops.com/index.php/ps/ ... f-coaching
https://www.sexyloops.com/index.php/ps/ ... f-coaching
- Paul Arden
- Site Admin
- Posts: 19643
- Joined: Thu Jan 03, 2013 11:20 am
- Location: Belum Rainforest
- Contact:
Thinner Lines = higher speed
Board members are very welcome of course! There may be a fire
Thinner Lines = higher speed
Can we confirm that the issue is unresolved and that the topic can be considered as obsolete?
Thanks
Merlin
Thanks
Merlin
Fly rods are like women, they won't play if they're maltreated
Charles Ritz, A Flyfisher's Life
Charles Ritz, A Flyfisher's Life
- Paul Arden
- Site Admin
- Posts: 19643
- Joined: Thu Jan 03, 2013 11:20 am
- Location: Belum Rainforest
- Contact:
Thinner Lines = higher speed
Not yet! I’m just not fast but get there in the end
Cheers, Paul
Cheers, Paul
- Lasse Karlsson
- Posts: 5801
- Joined: Wed Jan 09, 2013 9:40 pm
- Location: There, and back again
- Contact:
Thinner Lines = higher speed
Get thinner, I hear you speed up thenPaul Arden wrote:Not yet! I’m just not fast but get there in the end
Cheers, Paul
Cheers
Lasse
Your friendly neighbourhood flyslinger
Flycasting, so simple that instructors need to make it complicated since 1685
Got a Q++ at casting school, wearing shorts
Flycasting, so simple that instructors need to make it complicated since 1685
Got a Q++ at casting school, wearing shorts
Thinner Lines = higher speed
But he’ll get weaker
“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius — and a lot of courage — to move in the opposite direction.” — Ernst F. Schumacher
https://www.sexyloops.com/index.php/ps/ ... f-coaching
https://www.sexyloops.com/index.php/ps/ ... f-coaching
- Lasse Karlsson
- Posts: 5801
- Joined: Wed Jan 09, 2013 9:40 pm
- Location: There, and back again
- Contact:
Thinner Lines = higher speed
Not neccecarily VinceVGB wrote:But he’ll get weaker
Your friendly neighbourhood flyslinger
Flycasting, so simple that instructors need to make it complicated since 1685
Got a Q++ at casting school, wearing shorts
Flycasting, so simple that instructors need to make it complicated since 1685
Got a Q++ at casting school, wearing shorts
Re: Thinner Lines = higher speed
Was a conclusive consensus every achieved at your post-competition soirée? We were just talking about this very thing (or something close enough) last night in our CCI COVID Zoom meeting.
Carol
Because it's painful getting flies out of spruce trees.
Because it's painful getting flies out of spruce trees.
Re: Thinner Lines = higher speed
I don't know if it was answered, but I presume the answer is because it takes more work to accelerate a heavier object. And you are limited by the caster's arm. If you build the same amount of momentum, the lighter line will travel faster (of course you also have to accelerate your arm and the rod, so it isn't quite so simple.
Of course the heavier line has more momentum so will also travel further for the same velocity.
The third factor on line diamenter I am sure also comes into play (more air resistance on the front face of the loop.
I would like to know what the consensus was.
Of course the heavier line has more momentum so will also travel further for the same velocity.
The third factor on line diamenter I am sure also comes into play (more air resistance on the front face of the loop.
I would like to know what the consensus was.
- Bernd Ziesche
- Posts: 3436
- Joined: Wed Jan 09, 2013 10:01 pm
- Location: Whereever the fish are!
- Contact:
Re: Thinner Lines = higher speed
Hi Paul,
I have no time to work thru all 6 pages here. Sorry for that.
Anyway I give it some thoughts on your initial post.
If I want fastest possible rotation, I take off line + tip section + middle section. Then I have less resistance to overcome and thus achieve fastest possible rotation for the butt section. The more weight and surface (friction) I add, the more it will slow my max possible speed.
Increasing line weight means more weight and more surface. Thus you feel more resistance.
Now if this slows you down should depend on how much line speed you aim for.
Since the relation between line surface (friction) and line mass gets worse when decreasing line weight (which is why we cast heavier lines further), you most probably have to add more speed to hit the same distance, I think. Since you also feel less resistance, I think you are spot-on in your findings and indeed will increase line speed for the same distance when going down in wt..
I don't really think it's much more complicated than that. But I very much might be wrong here.
To be honest I never realized this yet. Good point, mate!
Cheers
Bernd
I have no time to work thru all 6 pages here. Sorry for that.
Anyway I give it some thoughts on your initial post.
If I want fastest possible rotation, I take off line + tip section + middle section. Then I have less resistance to overcome and thus achieve fastest possible rotation for the butt section. The more weight and surface (friction) I add, the more it will slow my max possible speed.
Increasing line weight means more weight and more surface. Thus you feel more resistance.
Now if this slows you down should depend on how much line speed you aim for.
Since the relation between line surface (friction) and line mass gets worse when decreasing line weight (which is why we cast heavier lines further), you most probably have to add more speed to hit the same distance, I think. Since you also feel less resistance, I think you are spot-on in your findings and indeed will increase line speed for the same distance when going down in wt..
I don't really think it's much more complicated than that. But I very much might be wrong here.
To be honest I never realized this yet. Good point, mate!
Cheers
Bernd
http://www.first-cast.de
The first cast is always the best cast.
The first cast is always the best cast.