Hi, first off, great videos. lots of great information. thank you for taking the time to test and show results. im wondering if the manufacturers of the lines actually have to test their product in similar tests. I am NOT questioning whether your testing is similar. I am curious if they have a certain set of procedures to come to their "marketed" claims. I am a recreational fisherman. recently I see the "trend" in fisherman being swayed to use braided line and a leader of either mono, flouro or copolymer. is this just a recent gimmick? could you pick a popular knot and come up with a test that tests the knot between leader and braid? Thank you. just thought I would share this idea. I am not trying to add to your workload, and I do appreciate your efforts. this is great information for the fishing world.
just going from what i see from actual sanding, I would say a harder material actually sands away more easily and quicker than softer materials. Although we would intuitively think harder fluoro would run against objects with less damage, based on seeing how hard materials easily sand away with sanders, a softer regular nylon mono line should survive abrasion better.
Nice man. I like the spooling machine idea. Next time. U should do all of them the same 50 lb test throw in berkly big game for giggles thats what most everyone i know compare everything too. Vs a few 150lb braids
There are so many variables with abrasion resistance..... I have a question Have you called all these companies you chose to test and asked them how they test the lines they sell?
I just threw out a 5 lb. Spool of 80 lb. Test like that . I'd ti knots with new line and they'd break on occassion. My 12 lb test is perfectly clear; it's bad line that you have, I think that's so
Having fished all over for a long time with everything I do not believe in magic bullets. I can appreciate options though. Knowing the line you choose, the options and the variables allows you to choose for every variable and never have to scratch your head until you get a bad lot#. Personally I would consider abrasion in sandy environments and cut resistance in rocky environments and around structure. Cut resistance would have to be measured with line dragged laterally across a sharp surface to model a fish dragging across a piling or rock/barnacles etc... I have had problems with lines being nicked and weakened far more often than abraded (even in sandy conditions with rocks).
Hi, first off, great videos. lots of great information. thank you for taking the time to test and show results. im wondering if the manufacturers of the lines actually have to test their product in similar tests. I am NOT questioning whether your testing is similar. I am curious if they have a certain set of procedures to come to their "marketed" claims. I am a recreational fisherman. recently I see the "trend" in fisherman being swayed to use braided line and a leader of either mono, flouro or copolymer. is this just a recent gimmick? could you pick a popular knot and come up with a test that tests the knot between leader and braid? Thank you. just thought I would share this idea. I am not trying to add to your workload, and I do appreciate your efforts. this is great information for the fishing world.
Excelente gracias
Dude just casually has a world record fish behind him lol
Very interesting watch..so many variables, this test was a decent one..thankyou for the knowledge..
just going from what i see from actual sanding, I would say a harder material actually sands away more easily and quicker than softer materials. Although we would intuitively think harder fluoro would run against objects with less damage, based on seeing how hard materials easily sand away with sanders, a softer regular nylon mono line should survive abrasion better.
Why haven't you done this test with yozuri hybrid?
Nice man. I like the spooling machine idea. Next time. U should do all of them the same 50 lb test throw in berkly big game for giggles thats what most everyone i know compare everything too. Vs a few 150lb braids
Should do a 20lb test category. Bass fishing line, change drastically. By lbs.
I'd like to see some test with cheap walmart line and old line
There are so many variables with abrasion resistance.....
I have a question
Have you called all these companies you chose to test and asked them how they test the lines they sell?
what do you think is the best mono mainline resistent at abrasion 0,60-0,70?
The part I dont like about tritanium plus is that the clear is off white, not truly clear.
I just threw out a 5 lb. Spool of 80 lb. Test like that . I'd ti knots with new line and they'd break on occassion. My 12 lb test is perfectly clear; it's bad line that you have, I think that's so
It's hard to beat Sufix, I love the tritanium for spinnerbaits and cranks.. Great video!
This is really really tripped out
Break strength vs abrasion resistance in your single test type is insane...
Great content 👌
so what you’re saying i should move to 50lb mono as my pike leaders instead of fluorocarbon 😂
Mono is more abrasion resistant
600 "grit" not "grain"...
Having fished all over for a long time with everything I do not believe in magic bullets. I can appreciate options though. Knowing the line you choose, the options and the variables allows you to choose for every variable and never have to scratch your head until you get a bad lot#. Personally I would consider abrasion in sandy environments and cut resistance in rocky environments and around structure. Cut resistance would have to be measured with line dragged laterally across a sharp surface to model a fish dragging across a piling or rock/barnacles etc... I have had problems with lines being nicked and weakened far more often than abraded (even in sandy conditions with rocks).
Here its the fish that break the lines not the sand or rocks. Rough mouths, sharp gill plates, teeth. I agree cutting test would be nice