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Functional roll casts
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- Lasse Karlsson
- Posts: 5786
- Joined: Wed Jan 09, 2013 9:40 pm
- Location: There, and back again
- Contact:
Functional roll casts
Think you need the Toft Block
Right at the end
Cheers
Lasse
Right at the end
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
Functional roll casts
I treat the lift as the first part of the forward cast - both hands straight up together, no change of angle - then pull down through the rotation. This serves to increase the Dloop and move point P forwards. And yep the Toft block is a wickedly fine bit of knowledge.
Make your explanations as simple as possible, but no simpler. A Einstein.
Functional roll casts
Thanks! Just played with this and it helps but doesn’t solve it entirely. I haven’t videoed these casts, but it feels like I get zero preload / tension before I get to the “power stroke” part. The entire performance is so limp. It feels like the entire preload move is wasted on removing slack or something.Lasse Karlsson wrote:Think you need the Toft Block
My guess is that this also restores some tension. Do you initially allow point P to slide behind you? Good tips, I will give these a try. Much appreciated.Morsie wrote:I treat the lift as the first part of the forward cast - both hands straight up together, no change of angle - then pull down through the rotation. This serves to increase the Dloop and move point P forwards.
Functional roll casts
Hey Jarmo
I really struggled with this!
Next time you are out, try to notice how far back the rod is going on the set up, and be really picky about it.
IMHO it needs to be back at least 45 degrees, and this is further back than you think it is! If it’s only 30 deg you aren’t getting a good d-loop no matter where point p is (in no/slow current I’d be looking for pt P to be almost next to me).
For me it helps to make sure my bottom hand is well away from my body (you can aim for a straight arm!), and roughly in line with the centre of my chest. Notice how far out Andy Toft’s bottom hand is at the start. If your hand stays close to your body, you’re unlikely to get the rod back far enough (no D-Loop), and you’ll end up with a top-handed stroke with either an open loop or a loop crashing into the water.
Hope that helps.
Will
I really struggled with this!
Next time you are out, try to notice how far back the rod is going on the set up, and be really picky about it.
IMHO it needs to be back at least 45 degrees, and this is further back than you think it is! If it’s only 30 deg you aren’t getting a good d-loop no matter where point p is (in no/slow current I’d be looking for pt P to be almost next to me).
For me it helps to make sure my bottom hand is well away from my body (you can aim for a straight arm!), and roughly in line with the centre of my chest. Notice how far out Andy Toft’s bottom hand is at the start. If your hand stays close to your body, you’re unlikely to get the rod back far enough (no D-Loop), and you’ll end up with a top-handed stroke with either an open loop or a loop crashing into the water.
Hope that helps.
Will
Lineslinger
Barrio Pro-team
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"The only advice it is necessary to give the angler… is to avoid any approach to foppery, as trout have the most thorough contempt for a fop…”
WC Stewart
Barrio Pro-team
SGAIC
AAPGAI
"The only advice it is necessary to give the angler… is to avoid any approach to foppery, as trout have the most thorough contempt for a fop…”
WC Stewart
Functional roll casts
I am glad to hear this - even more so since your expression suggests that you eventually cracked it.Will wrote:I really struggled with this!
It is exactly this type of problem solving that keeps me interested in casting.
So very true. Furthermore, his hands (and yours, like you wrote) are far in front, which I suppose would tend to keep point P in front. So, from my point of view he has sacrificed translation (using hands) to gain a larger amount of rotation. Earlier I was aiming for a lot of translation, which I think is a magical move in many cases, but may be my doom here.Next time you are out, try to notice how far back the rod is going on the set up, and be really picky about it.
IMHO it needs to be back at least 45 degrees, and this is further back than you think it is! If it’s only 30 deg you aren’t getting a good d-loop no matter where point p is (in no/slow current I’d be looking for pt P to be almost next to me).
For me it helps to make sure my bottom hand is well away from my body (you can aim for a straight arm!), and roughly in line with the centre of my chest. Notice how far out Andy Toft’s bottom hand is at the start.
So we seem to have the following chips: rotation, translation (body, hands) and lift. I will experiment with these asap and let you know.
Much obliged.
Functional roll casts
I tested this yesterday and yes, increasing the angle makes a big difference. Even if I lose some translation.Will wrote:Next time you are out, try to notice how far back the rod is going on the set up, and be really picky about it. IMHO it needs to be back at least 45 degrees, and this is further back than you think it is! If it’s only 30 deg you aren’t getting a good d-loop no matter where point p is (in no/slow current I’d be looking for pt P to be almost next to me).
Which makes sense. If the angle is 45 degrees, the rod and the horizontal distance between the tip and the butt are in the same ratio as the diagonal and side of a square, that is, square root of 2. So the horizontal distance between tip and butt is approximately 11’. That’s a lot of room for a forward stroke (with a risk of a convex tip path).
But that 11’ brings with it a problem with point P. If there is no current, and the roll cast has to be truly static, there is no way I can keep point P from going far behind me.
On the other hand, hypothetically speaking, if this would be related to an exam, maybe they would only state that it has to be perfectly static. Maybe they would not mention anything - and, more importantly, do not care - about the location of point P and that part is just in my head. I can only hope.
- Lasse Karlsson
- Posts: 5786
- Joined: Wed Jan 09, 2013 9:40 pm
- Location: There, and back again
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Functional roll casts
What kind of exam?
Cheers
Lasse
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
Functional roll casts
THCI.Lasse Karlsson wrote:What kind of exam?
(It specifies roll casts @70', but to be on the safe side I add 10' to all tasks.)
- Lasse Karlsson
- Posts: 5786
- Joined: Wed Jan 09, 2013 9:40 pm
- Location: There, and back again
- Contact:
Functional roll casts
FFI, then it's in your head
Cheers
Lasse
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
Functional roll casts
I am ecstatic to hear this was a mental issue only.Lasse Karlsson wrote:FFI, then it's in your head
This exchange of messages might have saved me tens of hours of time. That is no exaggeration, since for the CI I misinterpreted (on my own) the criteria for static roll casting on grass, and spent literally tens of hours exploring and tuning. Only one day before my test did I learn what the actual expectations were.
Thread hijack is over.
Regarding the original topic, I use static rolls regularly. The most common use is in places where the starting position or the only fishing position is between trees: no space behind, above or on either side. The best casting option may be a "crude spey"; flop the line out and then very carefully roll cast in an extremely limited space. Roll cast pickups are common in dry fly fishing. I have also learned to unsnag the fly in the way described on the first page of this thread.
In teaching, I have sometimes found roll casting a most useful tool to illustrate preload. A bit of tension and bend before rotation makes wonders in turning that lame roll into a zippy cast. I actually find it quite remarkable.