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I was turned onto this hook sharpener by a friend:
http://www.dmtsharp.com/products/detail.php3?use=6
Does not rust, sharpens hook fast and easier than anything I have used. Also clips onto your vest/pack and collapses to a reasonably small size. I get by with the fine model but the course is nice for big hooks.
-sean
-----Original Message-----
I
agree with the flat steel file and use the small Luhr Jensen style. You have to
be careful with this file because if you apply too much pressure or use the
wrong angle you can ruin a small hook. I am a fanatical hook sharpener and in
my experience few fisherman can recognize a dull hook or sharpen a hook
properly. I check hooks for sharpness constantly by dragging it across my
thumbnail. If it hangs when pulled by the eye it's sharp. Better hooks usually
start out sharp nowadays, but occasionally even brand new
Gamakatsu's(spelling?) can be dull. You don't know unless you check. When I'm
nymph or steelhead fishing I check the hook after every hang-up, even minor
ones. Occasionally I get a little careless about checking hooks and the fish
tell me my hooks are dull by coming off despite a good strike. In my
experience, the most common cause of lost fish right after hookup is dull
hooks. It's hard to check sharpness on hooks size 18 and under. If I lose 2
fish in a row right after a hookup I replace the fly. |
- Sharpening Hooks ffishnfly chatterton
- Re: Sharpening Hooks Keith Ayers
- Re: Sharpening Hooks Andrew Simmons
- Re: Sharpening Hooks WPCTWBUG
- RE: Sharpening Hooks Ransom, Sean
- RE: Sharpening Hooks CHARLIE MASTRO

