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  • Re: FW: FW: loops Fall?





    Paul & Troy...

    Unfortunately, in the salt water fly fishing game, we break rods every now and then.  I kept a tally on those over the past few years as to the reason:

    1.)  Loose fitting ferrule.

    2.) Stress riser produced by a former injury to the rod. One example is the little noted damage to the rod when a heavy weighted fly strikes the rod shaft when casting.  The rod doesn't break until later stressed.

    3.) The ill-advised practice of trying to "lift" a deep running large fish....such as a tuna when the fish is directly under the boat by exceeding it's elastic limit.  (This is the number one reason with anglers doing this kind of fishing without experience......and using fly rods not butt-section stress designed.)

    4.) I broke two of them when a tarpon jumped close to the boat.  The line slack half-hitched around the tip section and the rod broke there when I came tight.

    5.) When fishing in 3rd world countries I've had them break simply from the trauma of being damaged in pangas which are driven by natives in heavy seas with enough speed to have me hold on just to stay alive.  There is no safe place to put the rod in the craft, and you don't have time to dismantle and pack it up. (A reason to use old rods or to bring fiberglass rods.......not graphite.)

    6.) Rods even properly placed in the rod holders of a flats skiff are not immune.  Many of us have boated a large cobia which thrashes about the deck and breakes a rod or two. (We don't boat fish to be released.  Only those we wish to keep for the table.......cobia are very good eating !)  That's one fish which fights hardest after you've landed him.

    7.) Once, while staked out on a flat....and bored, waiting for bonefish which never came, I had a mental lapse and stuck my rod tip down a little hole in the sand.  A stone crab bit the tip end off !  (How to feel foolish.)

    8.) I could go on with non-fishing ways of breaking rods. These run the gammut from car doors to stepping on them.(One reason for the, "rule" that you never lay one on the ground.)

    Another little, "rule" is to always put your rod through a doorway before you go through......they go on and on.

                                                                              Gordy

                                                                           




     


    From: "Paul Arden" <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    Reply-To: "Paul Arden" <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    To: "Miller, Troy" <Troy.Miller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Gordon Hill" <hillshead@xxxxxxx>
    Subject: Re: FW: FW: loops Fall?
    Date: Sat, 11 Mar 2006 05:58:26 -0000

    Hi Troy,
    I find that distance casting has helped my short casting as well, and has
    given it pace, which is useful here in NZ. Still sounds like you can already
    cast a hell of a long way anyway!
    Yep 5 rods. I normally only bust 2/year so it was quite impressive even
    for me. Some of them I fell over while trying to find my way to the river.
    Others just self destructed when I wasn't looking. I'm not sure how it
    happens really but everyone - apart from Sage - appear quite impressed.
    I've never taken a tractor to pieces but I did once rebuild a landrover
    gearbox on the way to a gamefair. Man, that was an interesting truck
    (when it started).
    Cheers,
    Paul
     
     
    ----- Original Message -----
    Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006 5:42 PM
    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?

    Yes, unfortunately I was born an engineer.  I took apart and reassembled one of my grandfather?s tractors that wasn?t running when I was 10 years old, and actually got it working!  Growing up on a farm requires a person to do things for himself and through all that, I developed an insanely logical mind.  It?s only gotten worse as I?ve aged?

     

    Dang!  You snapped 5 rods in a year??  Were they all in the course of fishing?  I?m sure when you?re pushing everything close to the limits like you guys do, it HAS to happen sometimes.  I busted my hand this year and it?s still not right.  I can?t grip the rod like I used to be able to.  In 2001 up in Livingston during Conclave, we had a ?show off? session after the closing BBQ on Saturday night.  It started with Mel K showing everyone how easy it is, even for an old man, to cast 100 feet with an 11 wt rod.  He invited a bunch of people up to cast, and you know how that goes.  Some people with big mouths can?t cast their way out of a paper bag, and then you have the sleepers who you never expected to get 70 feet are able to punch it out to 110.  As it was getting dark, Dusty Sprague asked me to give it a shot, but I didn?t really want to embarrass myself.  I had just put on the ?Cast From The Past? bamboo casting event that day, and we?d been casting cane all week.  I didn?t think I was in much of a frame of mind (or feel) to cast that broomstick Scott STS.  Long story short, after a bunch of coercion, I stood up there and carried the whole 10-wt Rio Long Cast line and then shot out to 138 feet, where I slammed the loop into a van over in the parking lot.  Altitude is a wonderful thing?  Dusty shouted HOLY SH1T!!  What?s your name??  Oh, YOU?RE Troy Miller??  Like that was supposed to mean something?  Anyway, it felt cool to be almost semi-famous for a second?  That was unquestionably my longest cast ever, as I virtually NEVER cast for max distance.  I don?t really know what I?m capable of, but I?m sure it?s not world class so it doesn?t really matter to me.

     

    Regards -- TAM

    -----Original Message-----
    From:
    Paul Arden [mailto:paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
    Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006 1:15 AM
    To:
    Miller, Troy; Gordon Hill
    Subject: Re: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    Hi Tam,

    just catching up! Yes I agree.

    So you're an engineer? That's cool.

    I studied engineering for a while before

    making a life change (one of many!).

    I've never broken a rod through casting although

    I managed to break five last year quite spectacularly.

    Cheers,

    Paul

    ----- Original Message -----

    From: Miller, Troy

    Sent: Friday, March 03, 2006 3:32 PM

    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    There?s no question that higher modulus graphite is more prone to breakage.  Young?s modulus (modulus of elasticity or stretch coefficient) does NOT tell you how strong a material is, or how far it will elongate before breakage.  There?s a lot of confusion in the flyfishing world today about modulus.  Stiffness and strength are NOT at all the same thing.  When I talk with more advanced students about modulus, I make sure they understand the concept of stress/strain, even though I don?t talk about it in engineering jargon (except, of course, when I?m teaching engineers?).  Carrying this idea further, it?s a shame that more people don?t grasp the concept of sectional stiffness (by virtue of tube OD, wall thickness, and elastic modulus).  Perfect example ? why was the RPL+ so much stiffer a rod series than the SP, when the SP was made from Graphite IV (considerably higher modulus)?

     

    Regards -- TAM

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Paul Arden [mailto:paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
    Sent: Thursday, March 02, 2006 5:19 PM
    To: Miller, Troy; Gordon Hill
    Subject: Re: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    Perhaps the ferrule was cracked or loose.

    I think a rod with a higher modulus would be more prone to breaking.

    It was a cheap 3 weight. We were carry a DT 12 and throwing 120.

    Many rods will bend butt to tip. It's difficult to do this while casting!

    I know it's possible but we couldn't achieve it, and that was the mandate!

    Cheers, Paul

    ----- Original Message -----

    From: Miller, Troy

    Sent: Thursday, March 02, 2006 4:00 PM

    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    Interesting!  I?ve seen at least three rods broken by casting lines only two or three line weights ?too heavy? on them.  I wasn?t on the cork of any of them, but the offending casters were not punters?

     

    Last year, John Wilson broke a Hardy Angel casting the ?proper? line weight on it (full flyline), and if you?ve seen John cast, you know that he?s got it going on.  What kind of rod was that 3-weight, and how far could you put the 12-wt line out?

     

    Regards -- TAM

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Paul Arden [mailto:paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
    Sent: Wednesday, March 01, 2006 10:50 PM
    To: Miller, Troy; Gordon Hill
    Subject: Re: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    Hi Gordy/Troy,

    I'm not sure where this thread has gone, because I'm just sifting through my emails.

    I too thought that a much overlined rod would break through casting.

    Last October a bunch of us played around with a variety of lines and rods.

    We took a three weight rod and a 12 line and despite our best efforts we couldn't

    break the rod. It didn't feel very nice but we were making long casts with maximum

    force.

    We also stuck a three weight line on a 11 weight rod, which was interesting too

    (nice loops!).

    All I can say about overloading and underloading is that the terms are used to

    denote "feel" and that's more about what one is used to. To say a rod is overloaded

    is actually technically incorrect unless you manage to pop it.

    Dunno if this adds anything, 400 mails to catch up with, all of which are essential.

    Cheers,

    Paul

    ----- Original Message -----

    From: Miller, Troy

    Cc: sportfisher@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ; mildbill@xxxxxxxxxxxx ; caddis@xxxxxxx ; Brydnlnims@xxxxxxxxxxx ; cezannealexander@xxxxxxxxxxx ; crazycharlie@xxxxxxx ; croberts@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ; blacksalmon@xxxxxxxxxxx ; DermSox@xxxxxxx ; gladesflybum@xxxxxxxxx ; gavin@xxxxxxxxxxx ; iverson@xxxxxxxxx ; jfs523@xxxxxxxxxxx ; jerry_puckett2001@xxxxxxxxx ; captsilverking@xxxxxxx ; till@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ; kathleen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ; thedamselfly@xxxxxxxxxxx ; plami@xxxxxxxxxxx ; ray@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ; kerrrc@xxxxxxxxx ; simbirsw@xxxxxxx ; bobbeanblossomFFF@xxxxxxxxxxx ; hillcathy@xxxxxxx ; dnewpher@xxxxxxxxxxxx ; donjack@xxxxxxxxxxx ; douglas.swift@xxxxxxxxxxxx ; erniemaynard@xxxxxxxxxxx ; flyfsfrank@xxxxxxx ; gregrahe@xxxxxxxxxxx ; hlhpc@xxxxxxx ; jeff@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ; jhara.carter@xxxxxxxxxxx ; harveyjl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ; t.maltese@xxxxxxxxx ; skifishvail@xxxxxxxx ; jfv@xxxxxxxxxxxx ; trallag@xxxxxxx ; captflyrod@xxxxxxx ; mollysemenik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ; paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ; fraudflies@xxxxxxx ; shane@xxxxxxxxx ; snowmonkey29@xxxxxxx

    Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2006 9:03 PM

    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    Again, I failed to make myself clear.  I meant to write that the 9-weight line is used on a 9-weight rod of the same manufacturer?s rod series.  I completely agree that you would seriously overload the 4-weight rod (probably to the point of breakage) if you attempted to distance cast the 9-weight line on the 4-weight rod.  

     

    So, let me try to say it again, more clearly this time. 

     

    If I take a Miller Manufacturing ?Blister? series rod, expertly designed to cast a 4-weight flyline and loaded it with a standard WF4F flyline of any reputable manufacture, I might expect to get an 80 foot cast out of it.  Then, I take a Miller Manufacturing ?Blister? series rod designed to cast a 9-weight flyline and load it up with a standard 9-weight WF line and cast it for max distance.  I believe I?ll be able to cast well in excess of 100 feet with this setup.  The reason is that I?ve got considerably more momentum with the 9-weight, and although I may not have quite the muzzle velocity, my retained energy downrange is much greater with the heavier bullet.  Does that paint a better picture, hopefully?

     

    Regarding overlining/underlining a rod, I agree with everything you wrote and have for 20+ years.  Thanks

     

    Regards -- TAM

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Gordon Hill [mailto:hillshead@xxxxxxx]
    Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2006 2:25 PM
    To: Miller, Troy; flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx; sobbobfish@xxxxxxx; rtab@xxxxxxx; CAPTPERMIT@xxxxxxx; creangler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx; dan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; daver@xxxxxxxxxx; dennisg@xxxxxxxxxxxx; captdoug@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; dsprague01@xxxxxxxxxxx; ephemera@xxxxxxx; brushycreekfc@xxxxxxxxx; barefootj@xxxxxxx; bradyir@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; flyfishar@xxxxxxxxxxx; ken.cole@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; captkirk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; glbaggett@xxxxxxxxx; mkreider1@xxxxxxx; martyt@xxxxxxxxxx; niallogan@xxxxxxxxxx; pminnick@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; bigfly@xxxxxxxxx; whorwood@xxxxxxxxx; flycasts@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; sheila@xxxxxxxxxx; scjacobs@xxxxxxxxxxxx; cooper@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; tharper@xxxxxxxxxxx
    Cc: sportfisher@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; mildbill@xxxxxxxxxxxx; caddis@xxxxxxx; Brydnlnims@xxxxxxxxxxx; cezannealexander@xxxxxxxxxxx; crazycharlie@xxxxxxx; croberts@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; blacksalmon@xxxxxxxxxxx; DermSox@xxxxxxx; gladesflybum@xxxxxxxxx; gavin@xxxxxxxxxxx; hillshead@xxxxxxx; iverson@xxxxxxxxx; jfs523@xxxxxxxxxxx; jerry_puckett2001@xxxxxxxxx; captsilverking@xxxxxxx; till@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; kathleen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; thedamselfly@xxxxxxxxxxx; plami@xxxxxxxxxxx; ray@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; kerrrc@xxxxxxxxx; simbirsw@xxxxxxx; bobbeanblossomFFF@xxxxxxxxxxx; hillcathy@xxxxxxx; dnewpher@xxxxxxxxxxxx; donjack@xxxxxxxxxxx; douglas.swift@xxxxxxxxxxxx; erniemaynard@xxxxxxxxxxx; flyfsfrank@xxxxxxx; gregrahe@xxxxxxxxxxx; hlhpc@xxxxxxx; jeff@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; jhara.carter@xxxxxxxxxxx; harveyjl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; t.maltese@xxxxxxxxx; skifishvail@xxxxxxxx; jfv@xxxxxxxxxxxx; trallag@xxxxxxx; captflyrod@xxxxxxx; mollysemenik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; fraudflies@xxxxxxx; shane@xxxxxxxxx; snowmonkey29@xxxxxxx
    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    Troy....

    Depends upon the rating of that, "particular" rod.  This will make a mountain of difference.  Here's what I mean.

    If you are casting a rod designed to best handle a #4 line (A so-called 4-wt. rod)   then you can cast a 4 wt. line farther than you can a 9 wt. line....because that 9 wt. line will overload your rod.

    Should you wish to make a really long distance cast with that 4 wt. rod, you would do best with a lower rated line...say a 3 wt. line or even a 2 wt. line.......because these lines "become" 4 and 5 wt. lines as you carry more and more line out of the rod tip before your presentation cast.

    Now let's take the rod designated as a 9 wt.rod.   This one is designed to handle a 9 wt. line for short (30+ feet) casts.  You can make longer casts, but when you do you go toward overloading the rod as you get to carry say 70' of line.  For that reason, you will more easily make very long casts by underlining this 9 wt. rod with an 8 wt. or a 7 wt. line.  A 4 wt. line would require more line carried out of the rod tip to, "become" a 9 wt. line........and you might, then, be carrying more line than you can handle properly.

    The general rule is that for long belly lines usually used for distance casting, you increase the wt. of the line carried by each 5' to 6' of line beyond the first 30'........so a 7 wt. line becomes approximately a 9 wt. line when you carry 45' of line out of the rod tip when false casting.  It becomes a 10 wt. line as you carry 50' while false casting.

    Now that arithmatic increase in line wt. formula must be modified for short belly lines where it is true only for the length of the belly.....then the line wt, beyond that point increases less as length increases because you are out in the running line which weighs less per foot.

    The converse is true :-

    I sometimes over-line a rod if I'm to be making very short, "quick casts" as with some tarpon fishing where the fish may show up only 20' from me.  Here, I'll load my 10 wt. fly rod with a 12 wt. line.   That 12 wt. line becomes a 10 wt. at about 15' to 20' !!!!   If I don't use that heavier line, I may not be able to load my rod sufficiently to throw a tarpon fly accurately.

    Anyone contemplating these line calculations (or virtually anything to do with fly lines) should study Bruce Richards', MODERN FLY LINES.

                                                                                  Gordy

     

     


    From: "Miller, Troy" <Troy.Miller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    To: "Gordon Hill" <hillshead@xxxxxxx>
    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?
    Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2006 13:40:55 -0600

    I may not have made my point very clearly, I realized it after sending.  What I mean is that if I have an ?average? WF4F line on a particular rod and make my longest cast, it will be NOWHERE NEAR as far as if I made the cast with an ?average? WF9F line on a rod of the same rod series, everything else held constant.  Of course, this reaches a point of impracticality based on human physiology.  I believe I could probably cast the ?average? 9-wt further than an ?average? 25-wt because I would not have sufficient strength to achieve any appreciable tip speed or rod loading with the heavy setup.  KnowhatImean?

     

    Regards -- TAM

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Gordon Hill [mailto:hillshead@xxxxxxx]
    Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2006 1:33 PM
    To: Miller, Troy; flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx; sobbobfish@xxxxxxx; rtab@xxxxxxx; CAPTPERMIT@xxxxxxx; creangler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx; dan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; daver@xxxxxxxxxx; dennisg@xxxxxxxxxxxx; captdoug@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; dsprague01@xxxxxxxxxxx; ephemera@xxxxxxx; brushycreekfc@xxxxxxxxx; barefootj@xxxxxxx; bradyir@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; flyfishar@xxxxxxxxxxx; ken.cole@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; captkirk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; glbaggett@xxxxxxxxx; mkreider1@xxxxxxx; martyt@xxxxxxxxxx; niallogan@xxxxxxxxxx; pminnick@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; bigfly@xxxxxxxxx; whorwood@xxxxxxxxx; flycasts@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; sheila@xxxxxxxxxx; scjacobs@xxxxxxxxxxxx; cooper@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; tharper@xxxxxxxxxxx
    Cc: sportfisher@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; mildbill@xxxxxxxxxxxx; caddis@xxxxxxx; Brydnlnims@xxxxxxxxxxx; cezannealexander@xxxxxxxxxxx; crazycharlie@xxxxxxx; croberts@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; blacksalmon@xxxxxxxxxxx; DermSox@xxxxxxx; gladesflybum@xxxxxxxxx; gavin@xxxxxxxxxxx; hillshead@xxxxxxx; iverson@xxxxxxxxx; jfs523@xxxxxxxxxxx; jerry_puckett2001@xxxxxxxxx; captsilverking@xxxxxxx; till@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; kathleen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; thedamselfly@xxxxxxxxxxx; plami@xxxxxxxxxxx; ray@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; kerrrc@xxxxxxxxx; simbirsw@xxxxxxx; bobbeanblossomFFF@xxxxxxxxxxx; hillcathy@xxxxxxx; dnewpher@xxxxxxxxxxxx; donjack@xxxxxxxxxxx; douglas.swift@xxxxxxxxxxxx; erniemaynard@xxxxxxxxxxx; flyfsfrank@xxxxxxx; gregrahe@xxxxxxxxxxx; hlhpc@xxxxxxx; jeff@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; jhara.carter@xxxxxxxxxxx; harveyjl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; t.maltese@xxxxxxxxx; skifishvail@xxxxxxxx; jfv@xxxxxxxxxxxx; trallag@xxxxxxx; captflyrod@xxxxxxx; mollysemenik@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; fraudflies@xxxxxxx; shane@xxxxxxxxx; snowmonkey29@xxxxxxx
    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?

     

    Troy....

    Yes.... a line which is heavier/foot is more dense.  The more dense it is, the smaller its diameter for the same mass.  That translates into a line of the same weight designation travelling with less air/wind resistance......and, therefore, greater distance achieved with the same energy input by the caster.

    That is one of several reasons for my using a sinking (dense) line even when fishing on the flats on days when the wind is really howling.

    It might be the reason for excluding these lines for most competition casting events.

                                                                         Gordy

     

     


    From: "Miller, Troy" <Troy.Miller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    To: <bwrichards@xxxxxxx>, "Allen Crise" <flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx>
    CC: "Gary Wood" <brushycreekfc@xxxxxxxxx>, "Rusty dunn" <caandu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "cindy Alexander" <calex75773@xxxxxxxxx>, "Ron Mc Quary" <codyfly@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Clay Roberts" <CRoberts@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Sonny Hinojosa" <csonnyh@xxxxxxxxx>, "Dale Connally" <Dale_Connally@xxxxxxxxxx>, "david Bradley" <dallasflyfisher@xxxxxxxxx>, "dave Speer" <dave@xxxxxxxxx>, "Don DeRidder" <ddr125@xxxxxxx>, "Dennis Burns" <Dennis.Burns@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Don McCurry" <donmcmurry@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Matt Wilhem" <educate@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Wes Hodgson" <fifasoccer@xxxxxxx>, "ol Al" <flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx>, "Gary Eaton" <geaton@xxxxxxx>, "gordon Hill" <hillshead@xxxxxxx>, "Harvey Harris" <Hlhpc@xxxxxxx>, "james Parker" <james.parker3@xxxxxxxxxxx>, "Kevin Hensley" <jargo432@xxxxxxxxx>, "john Deardorff" <jdeardorff@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Jerry Puckett" <jerry_puckett2001@xxxxxxxxx>, "James Russell" <jrussell1128@xxxxxxxxx>, "Ken Cole" <ken.cole@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Ron Allen Thomas" <koolfly1@xxxxxxxxxxx>, "keith Richard" <KRichard@xxxxxxx>, "LC Clower" <lcclower@xxxxxxxxxxx>, "Harry Boyd" <maker@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Marshall Lasswell" <mlasswell@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Rod Henderson" <roderickmpt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Stacy Trimble" <stacytrimble@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Steve Hollensed" <stevehollensed@xxxxxxxxxx>, "Steve Barlow" <steve.barlow1@xxxxxxxxxxx>, "Travis Burt" <tburt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "John Till" <till@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "jeff jackson" <tjjackson3@xxxxxxxxx>
    Subject: RE: FW: FW: loops Fall?
    Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2006 13:12:49 -0600
    I'll add one thing to your final sentence, Bruce, which I believe to be
    equally significant.

    You wrote "a tight loop going fast goes farthest."

    Please consider: "a tight loop of heavy line going fast goes farthest."

    I know that we can get into a discussion of the diameter of the line and
    air resistance, and that we should consider the density rather than the
    weight of the flyline, yadda yadda, -- but for now, I'd just simplify it
    as above.

    Regards -- TAM

    -----Original Message-----
    From: bwrichards@xxxxxxx [mailto:bwrichards@xxxxxxx]
    Sent: Monday, February 27, 2006 9:06 AM
    To: Allen Crise
    Cc: Gary Wood; Rusty dunn; cindy Alexander; Ron Mc Quary; Clay Roberts;
    Sonny Hinojosa; Dale Connally; david Bradley; dave Speer; Don DeRidder;
    Dennis Burns; Don McCurry; Matt Wilhem; Wes Hodgson; ol Al; Gary Eaton;
    gordon Hill; Harvey Harris; james Parker; Kevin Hensley; john Deardorff;
    Jerry Puckett; James Russell; Ken Cole; Ron Allen Thomas; keith Richard;
    LC Clower; Harry Boyd; Marshall Lasswell; Rod Henderson; Stacy Trimble;
    Steve Hollensed; Steve Barlow; Travis Burt; John Till; jeff jackson;
    Miller, Troy
    Subject: Re: FW: FW: loops Fall?


    Hi Al,
    Yes, the easiest way to study the loop is to consider it like a bead
    chain
    and study what each bead does and the forces that act on it. Below is a
    study done by Noel and one of his students that addresses the issue of
    why
    loops don't fall as quickly as some might expect. Lots of math, but the
    conclusion is simple and clear.
    I'm not sure I understand the discussion of loop leg lengths, obviously
    they are constantly changing. The simplest way to look at loops is in
    this
    context.
    Loop front speed will always be equal to the (speed of the top leg + the
    speed of the bottom leg)/2. How far a cast will travel, and at what
    speed
    is determined by how much energy is put into the line, and how
    efficiently
    the loop is shaped. Just reconfirms what we've all known all along, a
    tight
    loop going fast goes farthest.
    Bruce
    (See attached file: Loopdrag.pdf)
    Scientific Anglers/3M
    4100 James Savage Rd.
    Midland, MI 48642 USA
    Tel: 989-496-1113
    Fax: 989-496-3374




    "Allen Crise"

    <flysoup@xxxxxxxx

    et>
    To
    "Rod Henderson"

    02/27/2006 08:18 <roderickmpt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    AM "Jerry Puckett"

    <jerry_puckett2001@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Ron Mc Quary"

    <codyfly@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Wes Hodgson"
    <fifasoccer@xxxxxxx>
    "Gary Eaton" <geaton@xxxxxxx>

    "Travis Burt"
    <tburt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    "Sonny Hinojosa"

    <csonnyh@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Dennis Burns"

    <Dennis.Burns@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Marshall Lasswell"

    <mlasswell@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "jeff jackson"

    <tjjackson3@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Rusty dunn"
    <caandu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    "John Till" <till@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Dale Connally"

    <Dale_Connally@xxxxxxxxxx>

    "gordon Hill" <hillshead@xxxxxxx>

    "keith Richard"
    <KRichard@xxxxxxx>
    "Steve Hollensed"

    <stevehollensed@xxxxxxxxxx>

    "Ron Allen Thomas"

    <koolfly1@xxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Matt Wilhem"

    <educate@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "LC Clower"
    <lcclower@xxxxxxxxxxx>
    "Ken Cole"
    <ken.cole@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    "james Parker"

    <james.parker3@xxxxxxxxxxx>

    "James Russell"

    <jrussell1128@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Harry Boyd" <maker@xxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Gary Wood"

    <brushycreekfc@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Don DeRidder" <ddr125@xxxxxxx>

    "dave Speer" <dave@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Clay Roberts"

    <CRoberts@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "cindy Alexander"

    <calex75773@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Stacy Trimble"

    <stacytrimble@xxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Steve Barlow"

    <steve.barlow1@xxxxxxxxxxx>

    "john Deardorff"

    <jdeardorff@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "david Bradley"

    <dallasflyfisher@xxxxxxxxx>

    "Troy Miller"

    <Troy.Miller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Harvey Harris" <Hlhpc@xxxxxxx>

    "ol Al" <flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx>

    "Don McCurry"

    <donmcmurry@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

    "Kevin Hensley"

    <jargo432@xxxxxxxxx>


    cc
    "Bruce Richards"

    <bwrichards@xxxxxxx>


    Subject
    FW: FW: loops Fall?

















    Howdy students and Gordy
    When the study of the loop is done the only way the study can, at this
    time, is in small section much like a tank track. Our engineers only
    work
    in straight vectors. So the tank track is one theory of what keeps the
    loop
    in the air. It is my belief that if the rod leg was not dragging the
    bottom
    of the loop it would not maintain is rotation and collapse. IF both of
    the
    legs were the same length you would not have the drag needed. In fact if
    we
    add a fly we get different loop curvatures. You case I will bet that the
    rod leg was longer and had the drag of the belly of the line adding the
    needed drag for turn over of the loop. Yes it reduced the drag and
    increased the time until turn-over of the fly leg was completed.
    Yes we are going to have to do some study on this or as you say
    BRUCE?

    Allen Crise FFF Master Casting Instructor
    SOC VP of Education
    Hawk Ridge Flycasting School
    2508 A County Road 1011
    Glen Rose, TX 76043
    254-897-2045
    geocities.com/rrdoctor
    flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Gordon Hill [mailto:hillshead@xxxxxxx]
    Sent: Monday, February 27, 2006 7:03 AM
    To: flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx
    Subject: RE: FW: loops Fall?



    ol Al...


    Troy is correct, in my opinion.


    The closest thing I've witnessed to the loop, "going on forever"
    occurred
    when one of our practical jokers cut the running line so that his
    buddy's
    distance cast would be a thing to behold. With so much resistance lost,
    the loop went out to the horizon. There was still enough rod leg of the
    loop left that the loop did turn over, but not until amazing distance
    had
    been reached and gravity took over.


    I suspect that if one cut the fly line so that the fly leg and the rod
    leg
    of the loop were the same length and weight that the loop would not
    unroll
    at all before coming to Earth........but I havn't actually tried that.


    We need to train one of our astronauts to make some casts in outer
    space.
    That would tell us what really happens there.



    Gordy











    From: "Allen Crise" <flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx>
    To: "Rod Henderson" <roderickmpt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Jerry Puckett"
    <jerry_puckett2001@xxxxxxxxx>,"Ron Mc Quary"
    <codyfly@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Wes
    Hodgson" <fifasoccer@xxxxxxx>,"Gary Eaton" <geaton@xxxxxxx>,"Travis
    Burt"
    <tburt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Sonny Hinojosa" <csonnyh@xxxxxxxxx>,"Dennis
    Burns"
    <Dennis.Burns@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Marshall Lasswell"
    <mlasswell@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"jeff jackson" <tjjackson3@xxxxxxxxx>,"Rusty
    dunn" <caandu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"John Till" <till@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Dale
    Connally" <Dale_Connally@xxxxxxxxxx>,"gordon Hill"
    <hillshead@xxxxxxx>,"keith Richard" <KRichard@xxxxxxx>,"Steve
    Hollensed"
    <stevehollensed@xxxxxxxxxx>,"Ron Allen Thomas"
    <koolfly1@xxxxxxxxxxx>,"Matt Wilhem" <educate@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"LC
    Clower" <lcclower@xxxxxxxxxxx>,"Ken Cole"
    <ken.cole@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"james
    Parker" <james.parker3@xxxxxxxxxxx>,"James Russell"
    <jrussell1128@xxxxxxxxx>,"Harry Boyd" <maker@xxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Gary Wood"
    <brushycreekfc@xxxxxxxxx>,"Don DeRidder" <ddr125@xxxxxxx>,"dave Speer"
    <dave@xxxxxxxxx>,"Clay Roberts"
    <CRoberts@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"cindy
    Alexander" <calex75773@xxxxxxxxx>,"Stacy Trimble"
    <stacytrimble@xxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Steve Barlow"
    <steve.barlow1@xxxxxxxxxxx>,"john Deardorff"
    <jdeardorff@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"david Bradley"
    <dallasflyfisher@xxxxxxxxx>,"Troy Miller"
    <Troy.Miller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Harvey Harris" <Hlhpc@xxxxxxx>,"ol Al"
    <flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx>,"Don McCurry" <donmcmurry@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>,"Kevin
    Hensley" <jargo432@xxxxxxxxx>
    Subject: FW: loops Fall?
    Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2006 06:35:34 -0600

    Howdy Gang and TROY
    You are right But what you added I would call "out side forces". Air
    density,will increase the drag, the Core of the line will make it
    harder
    for the loop to bend, The temperature of course in space would also
    prevent the line from even forming a loop. The idea that the loop is
    many
    small section that have an action much like the tracks on a tank or
    bulldozer that will "climb" on the air is also some of what happens to
    the
    loop. As many of you know the study of just what makes that loop stay
    aloft is something that you could do for year. My statement is such
    that I
    left it open with just the adding of Outside forces. Gravity being the
    biggie.
    Thanks Troy. I should have made that more clear.
    ol Al


    Allen Crise FFF Master Casting Instructor
    SOC VP of Education
    Hawk Ridge Flycasting School
    2508 A County Road 1011
    Glen Rose, TX 76043
    254-897-2045
    geocities.com/rrdoctor
    flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Miller, Troy [mailto:Troy.Miller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
    Sent: Monday, February 27, 2006 12:56 AM
    To: Allen Crise
    Subject: RE: loops Fall?

    I don't agree that good loops will go on forever - unless you're in
    outer
    space. Here on earth, air resistance and gravity will both take their
    toll on our loops. I agree that we have favorable lift dynamics
    helping
    reduce the effect of gravity to SOME extent, but they don't compensate
    100% IMHO. The work done in bending and unbending our flyline also
    gradually reduces the available energy as a loop unrolls. We don't
    really
    talk much about that, but I believe Bruce would concur, if we made our
    flyline with a ridiculously stiff coating, it would not travel very far
    at
    all and the loop would stop turning over.

    Then when we get into shooting line, that adds a guide friction term
    into
    the equation... It gets really complicated if you try to include all
    of the
    pertinent factors.

    Regards -- TAM
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Allen Crise [mailto:flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx]
    Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2006 1:04 PM
    To: Rod Henderson; Jerry Puckett; Ron Mc Quary; Wes Hodgson; Gary
    Eaton;
    Travis Burt; Sonny Hinojosa; Dennis Burns; Marshall Lasswell; jeff
    jackson; Rusty dunn; John Till; Dale Connally; gordon Hill; keith
    Richard;
    Steve Hollensed; Ron Allen Thomas; Matt Wilhem; LC Clower; Ken Cole;
    james
    Parker; James Russell; Harry Boyd; Gary Wood; Don DeRidder; dave Speer;
    Clay Roberts; cindy Alexander; Stacy Trimble; Steve Barlow; john
    Deardorff; david Bradley; Miller, Troy; Harvey Harris; ol Al; Don
    McCurry;
    Kevin Hensley
    Subject: loops Fall?

    Howdy Long line casters
    picked this off of Gordy's Mail
    First paragraph is from Tom Cooper
    After the **** is Bruce Richards.




    NOTE: If we held 60' at the end of the last cast there would be 30' out
    on


    the rod leg to loop center, 30' out from the center of the loop back
    the


    fly leg to above the rod tip, and 30' from that point back to the fly


    leaving 60' on the fly leg. (At a loop speed of 80 feet per second the
    fly


    would touch down in under .375 seconds).


    *****We have proven mathematically what we visually see. Good loops


    (tight, top pointed) defy gravity through some interesting wind
    resistance


    dynamics. Although a stationary loop dropped from normal height might
    hit


    the ground in .375 sec., a good loop will drop very little until it


    straightens. Watch any good caster carrying 80 ft. of line. If gravity
    was


    the only force acting on the line the loop would hit the ground before
    it


    went very far.



    So good loops will go on for ever unless acted on by out side forces or
    the length of your line.....





    ol Al
    Allen Crise FFF Master Casting Instructor
    SOC VP of Education
    Hawk Ridge Flycasting School
    2508 A County Road 1011
    Glen Rose, TX 76043
    254-897-2045
    geocities.com/rrdoctor
    flysoup@xxxxxxxxxx