That's just what I do. Buy a spool of cheap, bulk 2# mono, and use a drill
to transfer to a spool. Trilene usually has bulk spools of 2# test, which
is easy to tie with and tough.
Just use an old drill bit a little smaller than the spool hole (or a wood
dowel), then a few layers of tape until it fits tight. Start the mono with
a few turns, set the feed bulk spool on a nail with something to stop it
free-spinning, line it up and pull the drill trigger. Loads up a spool in
no time. I like the old deep wooden spools, as they hold a ton more. I'll
get 3 to 4 months useage off one spool, depending on what I'm tying. Since
you're not wrapping the spool, it doesn't twist at all.
DonO
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chappy" <[email protected]>
To: "VFB Mail" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 2010 11:09 AM
Subject: [VFB] Re: Rope Dub Muscles
Uni-Mono Thin. Broke it a few time when I overspun. But no
problem. I do not plan to respool 6 lb test however,
BTW - how do you spool it without twisting? I am sure you have some
line horror stories about respooling to the bobbin the first few
times... I furl my own leaders with a power drill. Now trying to do
that on a little spool? yikes.
On Nov 23, 11:20 am, "Don Ordes" <[email protected]> wrote:
LOL. I get accused of having 'fat fingers' all the time, especially when I
stack and pack hair mice. One friend said I could push a golf ball through
a garden hose. LOL
DVD#2 (if I do it) will have a bunch of roping segments with many furs-
possum being one. There's tons of sub-techniques and tricks to making furs
do the variety of looks they can do. It's a matter of seeing what a
particular fur does by making the dubbing and rope many different ways.
THEN you can tell if the results looks good on the fly design you're
making.
Don't have preconceived goals, like you said. You MAKE the dubbing do ITS
thing. That make sense?
Like the old quote goes- 85% of what a trout eats is 5/8" long, brown, and
fuzzy. With that possum, you'll be able to tie a half-dozen
different-looking brown and fuzzy flies just by selecting and manipulating
the fur and the rope.
Keep roping furs and your fingrs will get used to it. Remember, too, that
various rope tensions play a part in segment shape when you wrap, and
don't
forget the rope compression aspect.
Q? Are you tying with mono? This helps a great deal.
DonO
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