Showing posts with label Tippet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tippet. Show all posts

Tippet Rings


Tippet rings are an attribute to a tenkara line system that you can use to maximize your technique. They are not a choice for many anglers because tippet rings are not simple, easy or stealthy. People say they distract fish, weigh and impart drape and drag on the system and other negative things like it’s just one more thing to add in. I believe they do far more for my system of catching fish than the alternative such as a stopper knot at the end of the mainline.

I’ve been using tippet rings regularly when I was fly fishing long before 2009. I studied the why and why not, analyzing their performance all before my first day of tenkara. Initially, I didn’t use them on my first few tenkara lines. I wanted to learn tenkara, I thought it was important to copy people in the know about it. I didn’t want to go against convention and no tenkara angler used them at the time. In American social media tenkara circles, there were so many that said that their use was not tenkara. I didn’t know any better then but now?

When you know better, you do better.

I knew better than to buckle to peer pressure considering my own experience of how well they worked only after researching what tenkara was all about. Early on in the timeline, there were very strong opinions outside of Japan about what constituted tenkara.

I began to make friends with many Japanese tenkara experts, I asked a lot of questions about the equipment and techniques, what it exactly was. I bought all kinds of Japanese books about tenkara and keiryu books that had sections on tenkara. Old and new books that described the equipment. More importantly I bought a lot of magazines that chronicled tenkara over the decades. I also collected videos, none of which had one single thing about tippet rings.

I kept using them and I brought my lines to Japan where many anglers examined my equipment and cast my line system. Always my rod and line system was meet with positive reactions.

From all my research and fishing in Japan, I learned that the Japanese masters often borrowed from fly fishing. They wore vests, used American made vices, French fly boxes, they crafted a kit out of what worked. Many experts made their equipment and some used bait rods and hooks for their tenkara gear.

The beginnings of tenkara outside of Japan were in short a singular but narrow scope of tenkara. There were others that researched tenkara and added to the body of knowledge and I’m grateful yet I kept my focus on where tenkara came from and did not succumb to peer pressure.

Tippet rings are an attribute to maintaining the line, they give the tippet knot a uniform surface to break allowing you to feel that breaking point easier. Lines seem complete with a tippet ring and their performance supports this.

Many experts used cut fly lines, some used beaded flys, every expert borrowed technology from other forms of fishing but what I found running through all the experts craft was that they often created their own gear.

I create my custom lines terminated with tippet rings.

Tippet rings work on many types of lines, fluorocarbon, nylon, braided, tapered mono, I use them on all of the different types of lines I use.


If you are going to use tippet rings, there are a couple of things that you should do to make them work at maximum performance. 

#1. Use the best quality tippet rings you can find. That means using a tippet ring that are formed and not soldered or welded. I use Stonfo. There is no edges on the ring to cut your tippet.

#2. Use a needle (I use a sewing machine needle) to set the knot uniformly and to test the knot strength before applying knot glue. You are after the fish of a lifetime? Don't skip this step.

#3. Use a knot glue to coat the hook and additionally lock it. I use Loon Knot Sense and a Loon UV light for catalyzing the knot glue.

I regularly catch large fish using lines that I construct terminated with a tippet ring. I have yet to have a knot let go or a tippet ring fail. I protect my rods with premium tippet and the tippet ring gives the tippet attachment knot a uniform place to hold its strength. I depend on my tippet to break at the tippet ring if I get stuck or if I am on a fish that is foul hooked in swift current or a fish that is just too strong for my light tippets on tiny flys in heavy current.

Tenkara experts in Japan create their kit often borrowing from different disciplines such as fly and keiryu fishing. Creating your own tenkara kit, your equipment and techniques is fun.

The below reasons are why I use tippet rings.

Pros

1. They maintain the integrity of your line length. The metal tippet ring does not wear out.
2. The tippet ring gives the tippet knot a uniform surface to grip on to and break.
3. A tippet ring will give your breaking strength a more uniform feel.
4. Ease of use on stream.

Cons

1. Additional cost: More money for the rings plus Knot Sense glue and a UV light.
2. Extra step in line building at home.

I have cast lines with and without a tippet ring, there is no difference in drape or casting feel. As far as I can tell, the ring does not distract fish from the fly.

Take a look at the link below that further details the kit I use to rig my tenkara lines.

Line Rigging and Rod Repair Kit

Stonfo Tippet Rings

Creating Custom Tenkara Lines


See the seam/weld, it has an edge, do not use this type of ring

Below are a few different types of line that I have used tippet rings with.







Fluorocarbon Tippet & Knot Comparison

I spend a lot of time, money and effort to go fishing. My nearest trout stream is ninety minutes by highway drive from my home. My favorite fishing area is four hours by car and beyond that, I often drive or fly to Colorado which is an eight to twelve hour drive and often, quite a hike at the end of the road. I have fished for trout in the Waimea Canyon streams of Kauai and have fished with many experts in Japan on a couple of trips in the various mountain streams of their area. I've used two types of tippet on my trips and what follows are my reasons why I choose what I do.

For all of the time and energy that I take to pick out my target stream, I have had even more time to think about my equipment and compare it to all the other equipment that I've used. I use a technique of minimalism to maximize the quality of my kit. 

With all my experience choosing equipment, the long drive, the plane trip and the effort of getting to where I want to go, the last thing I want to happen is to catch the fish of a lifetime only to have my tippet let go...

Tippet choices are important to successful fishing. Nylon and Fluorocarbon are readily available in many sizes. I choose fluorocarbon for my tenkara rigging. It sinks and is nearly invisible in water as well as it hold knots well. In addition, it is stable in that it does not readily degrade with age or sunlight. Often a spool will last over a season so I continue to use it till it is gone without concern that it will become weaker. I choose a tippet that does not alarm the fish, if I know there are fish and they do not take, I will step down a tippet size until I am catching. .

.8 or 5x is my go to tippet size.

The rod I use basically determines the size tippet I choose.

For example, one of my tenkara choices is a travel rod that I throw in a bag not really as a primary rod but to have if the opportunity presents itself. Opportunistic tenkara fishing is one of my favorite types of fishing. I'm on a trip with my family and I come upon a stream, my travel kit is in my backpack and takes a minute or two to be rigged. The rod I choose is strong but fragile, I don't want oversized tippet if I get into a large fish, I want it to break if I catch a fish too big for the rod.

The lines I design are contrary to most tenkara fishers. I design a line for the shortest length of tippet. I want control over my kebari/fly. I want a naturally presented kebari but the shortest length of tippet to feel the take. Shortest being fifty centimeters or about eighteen to twenty inches, that's where I cut out the tippet and start over. 

I design my lines for one meter of tippet or less.

Over the years, I've used all kinds of knots. I keep returning to the basic 5 to 6 turn clinch knot to attach to the tippet ring on my mainline and the same knot to tye on my kebari. Often I use a silk bead cord eyed Japanese bait hook Sakasa kebari or a Ishigaki pattern on a Tiemco, Gamakatsu or a Owner eyed hook. I also use a tippet ring on the terminal end of my custom designed lines. The tippet ring works very well to give the clinch knot an even surface to break. If I I have to pull off my line because it is stuck, ninety percent of the time, my tippet breaks at the tippet ring. This is what I want to happen. One hundred percent of my fish are caught with a tippet ring and not once ever has my tippet ring failed. They work very well, I suggest you try them.

I use a clinch knot for the tippet ring and to tye on the kebari.

In the last 35 years, I have used many different brands of tippet. Rio, Orvis, Varivas, Scientific Anglers, Seaguar and Trouthunter.

Seaguar GranMax FX and Trouthunter are my favorites for several seasons.

I don't see that changing.

GrandMax FX and Trouthunter are available on fifty meter spools. That's nearly a hundred tippet changes for me. Enough to last through a regular season as I often re-use my tippet from day to day. If I know that I am fishing over rocks in a stream and I'm playing fish around them, I check the tippet for abrasion and replace it if I see evidence in the form of fray or discoloration.

I want my tippet to stay strong until I don't. 

I quit fly fishing more than ten years ago now to learn tenkara from the Japanese. I quit fly fishing, I did not give up my knowledge of where the fish where, the dynamics of casting or the skill in playing fish. Tenkara is a specialized technique and purpose built equipment for that technique yet many of the skills in Western fly fishing apply. I am not fly fishing with a western rod, I am using my knowledge of fishing a stream using tenkara techniques and equipment.

There is no tenkara specific tippet and if there was, I probably would not use it unless it was better than GranMax FX or Trouthunter. There is a single application where I use a non-specific tenkara line for Honryu tenkara techniques because there is not a Japanese tenkara line that does a better job. I do not adhere to a specific recipe in my tenkara, I choose Japanese tenkara techniques because they are superior to western fly fishing in mountain streams and in some applications on a river. The Japanese have refined their tenkara equipment and techniques over the decades and have shared their knowledge readily in their language and through ambassadors such as Hisao Ishigaki, Masami Sakakibara and Yuzo Sebata. There are many other experts in social media that also comprise the body of Japanese tenkara anglers.

Given that, I use the knowledge of our western fly fishers that test all kinds of tippet in a scientific method that is easily replicated multiple times in order to find the properties of each tippet. 

Below you will find a few links that may be of some assistance to you.

02X : 4.0 Go
01X : 3.5
0X : 3.0
1X : 2.5
2X : 2.0
3X : 1.5
4X : 1.0
5X : 0.8
6X : 0.6
7X : 0.4
8X : 0.3
9X : 0.25
10X : 0.2

Yellowstone Angler Tippet Shootout - Knot Comparison

Animation of Tying a Clinch Knot

Tippet Rings


This is a Karasu 400 with 5x or .8 tippet with a silk bead cord eye Wrong Kebari. Big fish that resulted in the hook pulling out. The tippet held strong.