Forums59
Topics1,057,490
Posts14,285,384
Members144,609
|
Most Online39,925 Dec 30th, 2023
|
|
Line Question
#12123011
03/04/17 03:21 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 63
ATXBassKiller
OP
Outdoorsman
|
OP
Outdoorsman
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 63 |
Hey guys, So this evening I decided to take a pleasant stroll out to my local lake (which is full of rocks laydowns and brush. This will be important later) after school since it was Friday and why not.... SO I just got a new tackle warehouse order in with some dirty jigs and I am super stoked to use the living rubber football jig. I get on the water and second cast dragging it on a rocky, brushy point and BANG fish on. Bring him in, check my line and it seems like there are no abrasions. Next cast BANG fish on. I end up losing it but reel up and it seems like no abrasion. I go to cast and SNAP there goes my brand new money jig and 50 yards of fluorocarbon souring through the air to Davy Jones' locker.
So, basically I am wondering if fluorocarbon (which is what I was using) is the best line type for a lake such as mine with lay downs and brush and rock. I have had it on for about 5 months because I can't afford to replace Seagur fluorocarbon all that often, but I had only used it like 15 times since I had put it on. Is braid the right choice, or should I just use cheaper flouro and replace it more often? This is not the first time this has happened to me, it also happened to me when skipping docks.
Thanks! Nathan
-Matthew 4:19- And He said to them, "Follow me, and I will make you fisher's of men."
Texas A&M CO' 21
|
|
Re: Line Question
[Re: ATXBassKiller]
#12123088
03/04/17 04:25 AM
|
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 101
RW Fred
Outdoorsman
|
Outdoorsman
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 101 |
Flouro is for experts and people with more patience than me. Either 40 pound braid with a leader or 15# Co-poly P-Line is great. If I had to throw one only, it would be 15# mono.
|
|
Re: Line Question
[Re: ATXBassKiller]
#12123113
03/04/17 04:42 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 3,562
Thad Rains
TFF Team Angler
|
TFF Team Angler
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 3,562 |
I use McCoys MEAN GREEN (copolymer), because of lakes like you mentioned. I can drag a 20' boat around with 2 BIG people in it against a 5-10 MPH wind. It is STRONG, ABRASION RESISTANT and VERY LOW MEMORY!!!!!! Try it, you should like it for the reasons I mentioned. I hvae straightened out #4 hooks with 15 # test. The baot towing is usually on 20# test. Hope this helps. Tight lines, keep safe and good luck.
Thad Rains
Tight lines, keep safe and good luck.
Thad Rains
|
|
Re: Line Question
[Re: ATXBassKiller]
#12171869
04/03/17 05:56 PM
|
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 107
prospec1
Outdoorsman
|
Outdoorsman
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 107 |
Floro is the only way to go on sinking lures.
|
|
Re: Line Question
[Re: Thad Rains]
#12171971
04/03/17 06:54 PM
|
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 27,358
SteezMacQueen
TFF Guru
|
TFF Guru
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 27,358 |
I use McCoys MEAN GREEN (copolymer), because of lakes like you mentioned. I can drag a 20' boat around with 2 BIG people in it against a 5-10 MPH wind. It is STRONG, ABRASION RESISTANT and VERY LOW MEMORY!!!!!! Try it, you should like it for the reasons I mentioned. I hvae straightened out #4 hooks with 15 # test. The baot towing is usually on 20# test. Hope this helps. Tight lines, keep safe and good luck.
Thad Rains The green stuff isn't strong enough for the hillbillies fishing lakes around me. I always get the "green wad" wrapped in my trolling motor. I figure it must be really cheap too..since it's usually about 200 yards worth of the [censored] each time. Maybe it's just easier to completely respool each time they get hung on a pad stem.
Eat. Sleep. Fish.
|
|
Moderated by banker-always fishing, chickenman, Derek 🐝, Duck_Hunter, Fish Killer, J-2, Jacob, Jons3825, JustWingem, Nocona Brian, Toon-Troller, Uncle Zeek, Weekender1
|