I'm a bugger for experimenting with fly lines.
Although I do not cut up or tweak every line I possess, the truth is that I do have something of an
addiction expensive habit and an overwhelming urge to play around what comes 'off the shelf' in order to get what I want for use on single handers and light double handers.
Some of you may have seen a recent post about some purchases I made of 'off the shelf' Airflo Turbo shooting heads (if not, see post on forum about fun with Fishtec). These were a sort of benchmark purchase for my latest single-handed project which is to see what happens when you try and make a Skagit for a single hander at home. In fairness, the Airflo heads couldn't be considered a benchmark as a Skagit as they're longer in the head and lighter for a given weight than the Skagit type, but they were 'on weight' or at least the weight I was expecting for their type and served as somewhere to cast off from. Oops, bad pun
Anyway, this current project is to develop a Skagit style (short heavy) single handed shooting head based on bits of other lines without spending the £50 plus on 15’ of OPST head. I’m not always tight, I’m sure it’s a good line but I baulk at spending so much for so little and if any other justification was required well this is just fun to do and I have the raw materials to do it
Initially I'm using an Orvis Helios 10' #7wt as the rod to develop a line for. I am very fond of this rod but I don’t use it often enough (and I should) and I have some adventures coming up (hopefully) on some smaller spate rivers where a Skagit head on this rod would be more useful than a full line. Also, I plan on getting very familiar with the upcoming Helios 3 rod in the same spec later in the year and a comparison between the two should prove interesting.
After messing with the Airflo #7wt shooting head and an SLX my first play down at the river with a home-made head was with a 17-gram head that came out of what had been a #8/9 Spey line I had kicking around. It worked well enough and was probably getting close to the desired properties but it was a fair bit longer than required at a smidgen over 23'. A length on the 10' rod I was super comfy with but not what I need for the confined space cutlery chucking I have in mind
I wanted to get closer to a Skagit length so some additional whisky fuelled research amongst my err
piles of shite ummm
random shit I'll never actually use errr
fly line spaghetti very fine (if slightly indulgent) collection of new and used fly lines has revealed I had a couple of DT12 lines kicking around that I was originally keeping a spares to create shooting heads for the (now defunct) CLA Game Fair ‘saltwater’ competition. These I knew would give me the weight I was after, plus a short front taper, in a compact head length.
I've now made a head from a DT12 by cutting it at 20 feet from the tip and chopping back until I achieved the weight (17g – well actually 16.81g) I was looking for. With home-made loops created by (at front of the head) revealing some of the core and whipping it back on to the line to form a loop, applying some superglue then shrink tubing over the top of the join. At the rear of the head, because of the thickness of the line (remember, it will be going through a #7wt rods guides) the loop was formed entirely from the lines core before again whipping and gluing to form the loop then shrink tubing. Down at the river this line immediately worked and worked well…. Apart from the running line I was using. In my experience Skagits have always been a bit ‘bangy’ and I wanted to damp that down by using a tapered running line. Now as it happens I used an Orvis tapered running line (from a long since discontinued range of s/h shooting heads they once produced) but unfortunately this had a habit of ‘turning’ the head too soon. I’ve since moved to a mono type running line and although ‘bangy’ and short the head goes like the proverbial off a highly polished Teflon coated shovel.
Project success
Yes, I’d say so. If you factor in the actual purchase prices of the two lines I’ve cut up to achieve the latest head I’ve saved £32 over the cost of the OPST. Is it as good
I don’t know, I haven’t yet cast one of the OPST Commando heads… but I imagine I’m close.
Does it do what I want it to do
Oh yes. Heavy tips, including home-made T14 tips, are no bother at all
Should everyone make one
Up to you
I saw this as a project worth pursuing and although I’ve come out of it with a head that works - which is nice - I've additionally been given some food for thought regarding using shooting heads again in other parts of my fishing.
For instance, I'm now thinking about making up some fast sinking heads for one of my #6wts as I have a day on a Loch coming up where you’d be daft if you don't have a quick sinker available that you can cast a long, long way.
Never dull
I'll try and post some pics up of the line in use and in production as I have some (somewhere). Be interested to see if anyone else on the forum has gone down this route, for the
craic H