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Post by willcfish on Oct 15, 2012 19:57:56 GMT -5
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Post by Smoothkip on Oct 15, 2012 20:38:05 GMT -5
Thanks for the video!
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Post by bassmassey on Oct 15, 2012 21:49:01 GMT -5
best knot to tie everything but the hook!
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Post by willcfish on Apr 8, 2013 22:40:45 GMT -5
You're welcome SmoothKip. It's my go to knot for anything I can get through the loop. Next to that is the improved clinch or the trilene knot.
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Post by Catfishrollo on Apr 9, 2013 8:46:46 GMT -5
Thanks for the video. Very useful information for the fisherman.. rollo
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Post by Skyline1506 on Apr 10, 2013 18:23:24 GMT -5
i like the trilene if i cant snell
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Post by captaininsano on Jul 6, 2013 17:21:09 GMT -5
i use the palomar when im in a hurry to get my line back out, my preferred knot is a snelled knot or berkley trilene knot as a close second both of those have nearly 100% break strength where the palomar is roughly 85%
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Post by Chuck on Jul 8, 2013 19:42:52 GMT -5
i use the palomar when im in a hurry to get my line back out, my preferred knot is a snelled knot or berkley trilene knot as a close second both of those have nearly 100% break strength where the palomar is roughly 85% 85%... I think knot! LOL! The Palomar breaks at different percentages in different lines, just like every other knot. I'm including a link to a test done on the machine used to do tests for line class world records. As you will see the Palomar tests at above 100% on a few lines, including my preferred line Ande Premium, in which it tests at 108% of the lines actual break strength. You just can't get any better than that. The line will break before the knot. If you look at the chart, the Palomar is a poor choice for some lines. The key is finding the knot that works best for the line a person uses, and tying it correctly. www.sportfishingmag.com/techniques/palomar-knot-break-analysis
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Post by captaininsano on Jul 8, 2013 20:42:56 GMT -5
i use the palomar when im in a hurry to get my line back out, my preferred knot is a snelled knot or berkley trilene knot as a close second both of those have nearly 100% break strength where the palomar is roughly 85% 85%... I think knot! LOL! The Palomar breaks at different percentages in different lines, just like every other knot. I'm including a link to a test done on the machine used to do tests for line class world records. As you will see the Palomar tests at above 100% on a few lines, including my preferred line Ande Premium, in which it tests at 108% of the lines actual break strength. You just can't get any better than that. The line will break before the knot. If you look at the chart, the Palomar is a poor choice for some lines. The key is finding the knot that works best for the line a person uses, and tying it correctly. www.sportfishingmag.com/techniques/palomar-knot-break-analysisI stand corrected good info thank you. I use mostly berkley trilene big game or big cat and have done some simple knot strength tests and what I stated earlier is what ive found to be true.
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