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skipper19

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Everything posted by skipper19

  1. Too bad we the people can't go into trillions of dollars in debt like our government does and offer the corn lobby enough to leave the food in the grocery store and feed mills. Until then, burn the Lucas E 10 e15 treat, and add a little upper cylinder lubricant fuel treat from Lucas in your 2 strokes to counter the effects of alcohol thinning of lubricant oil. I never drain my carbs or run them dry before storing. Keep the fuel management systems, vapor separation tanks, low pressure fuel pumps, on injection systems of the engine wetted, and no problem ever. Air exposure on surfaces is trouble where once occupied by ethanol.
  2. Les is right, it is long life. I ve had mine about 5 years. Still works.
  3. Just be aware that the TD has a lithium?.. battery and it is non replaceable. When the battery is done...it is done. I don't think there is a way of opening it without compromising it's water intrusion integrity.
  4. That's great! You are welcome, glad it is useful to you. The range finder trick is fast and easy if you have the space.
  5. Not everything is on that list. If you would care to use my spread sheet you can put any reel you want on it and find any combination of lines you would like. I don't expect anybody to do the thinking on this. I just want to help if I can. try it, if it doesn't apply to what you want to set up, then go to somebody's list...they might not have your reel listed though. Mark https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1WSAJpEtBJFazV4so1erVYC1U23IV0tcZT31tmtrfM54/edit?usp=sharing This a link to a workable spread sheet. just add the data you want to the fields and see if it might help with a reel and a line combo want.
  6. It's not like splitting hairs on this. even if you couldn't fit the 1 inch strands in the cube 45.46 times and lacked 1 or two horizontally or vertically it would only change the length by inches. even if you missed 30 strands it would only be 30 inches. Don't over think the volume thing. It's converting linear inches...just inches into the cubic inch. The reel has already been tested to hold the 30 lb mono by the factory and that is in yards. if it holds 450 yards that spool has a specific volume to do that. It doesn't change, even if you put 45 lb copper or 60 lb copper on it. It just fits less of that because the line is thicker, that's all. It's round and it's still round when you put it in a cube, with the same amount of air space around it no matter how it lays...UNLESS you spool it loose! Wanna have a drink with me! LOL!
  7. It's not done on displacement, nor as an experiment. As the line is laying dry, in a round shape, on the reel spool nearly the same as it would lay in a cube of 1 inch except for cross wrapping. Visualize a transparent cube 1 inch square. Cut the line into one inch sections and pack it dry into the cube across in one direction. A reel does this similarly, as it spools line on with the line guide in one direction with occasional cross wrapping. The cube now contains row after row of 1 inch sections layered across all the way vertically to the top. The line has a round thickness measured in thousands of an inch at its 180 degree axis. As it lays next to each other, it takes that space as mass volume with air displacement only. The reel also only has air displacement. If we were talking about water displacement on only one and not the other, then there would be an error in volume displacement. When the width of the 1 inch cube has 1000 thousanths across and in depth, and it can be divided by the number of strands 1 inch long by its thickness in thousanths of an inch. A particular line that has a thickness of .022 would take it's width from the thousanths in the 1 inch cube across and, as each layer comes on top it would take .022 from the depth. You only then need to know how many strands 1 inch long can fit the cube vertically and horizontally. 1000 being one as a unit of an inch, you divide 1 inch by .022 and get 45.4545 rounded to 45.46 and for the volume in a cubic inch you square that figure. 45.46 (horizontal) X 45.46 (vertical) and get 2066.6116 rounded to 2067 linear inches in a cubic inch volume. divided by 12 inches in a foot and you get 172.25 feet rounded up to the next whole number to 173 feet that will fill a cubic inch. That value can be used to figure the volume of a reel with a linear spec from the factory in yards of 30 lb monofilament because .022 thickness of line is the 30 lb. monofilament. The other lines of different thickness can now be used in the same way to determine how much will fill that spec. This has not failed me yet in 5 reels calculated the same way. Even for hybrid mono/braid backing and copper on top. Three different line types and it still filled the reel perfectly! Now I need a drink.....
  8. That IS nice! some of the inside shots look like the 5th wheel I sold last year...good luck with the sale! Very good deal for someone.
  9. Didn't buy a license here last year, not because I'm getting old either. I thought about that fact, but then I finally thought about it and, discovered it wasn't worth wasting my last possible decade of energy on this states goofy ideas in reality. I would actually prefer to see good numbers of bucks, rather than make my bones sit in the woods all day. Not that I don't enjoy the woods, but would rather be entertained by some prospects instead of watching birds...
  10. :rofl:
  11. I would say then that the Daiwa offerings are accurate, as their advertised manufacture capacity is what is also on the packing box and I have measured. I have found the Okuma offerings have been different on the packing box from the manufacturers claim...not sure why. Printing error maybe, but I have 2 Okuma reels of the same model, and they both are advertised different, and they both used any amount of what my calculations covered and a little more. they are over tight with a wind on leader, but not unusable in that respect. That throws everything out the window, unless you do what you did with the Okuma reels and hand checked them. It would be interesting to see what amount of 30# mono actually runs on their spools...
  12. Rob, was that with the Blood Run wire? Maybe the specs I found are wrong for that reel. Seems unlikely that something can hold 520 yards of 30 lb mono would fit less than a Daiwa Seagate 60 with 450 yard specs for the same pound mono. Of the two Seagates I have one spooled with 600 32 lb blood run and 900 30# backing, the other has 400 45# blood run and 900 30# backing. I used laser ranging for the copper measurement, and the backing was a reel fill spool off the shelf for 300 yards, used it all.
  13. You are correct, and your calculations are spot on. As I pointed out earlier, and Paul has demonstrated, that setup will be tight. Therefore Paul's assumption is evidently correct, so it is imperative to run a tight spool and mind the retrieve carefully. Dropping The braid to 30# would be a safe fill for 900 feet and have plenty room for a wind on 30# flouro leader of about 30 feet.
  14. Good Point Vince!...Like the Seagate 60, it is very quick on the pickup, but when that spool starts to grow in diameter, it gets tougher to reel without pumping the rod, and arms get wobbly..
  15. Okuma Clarion High Speed CLR-553LS Right 2BB + 1 RB 6.2:1 30.7 25/680 30/520 40/440 53 22 520 divided by 57 shows the reel having 9.12 cubic inches 500 feet of 45# blood run takes 6.5 cu inches leaving the rest of 2.62 cu inch for backing. 100 feet of 50 lb power pro takes .27 cu in. 2.62 divided by .27 equals 9.7 9.7 X 100 equals 970 feet for backing I'm not familiar with the 553, but calculation says it will fit. I trust the calculation as it says the capacity of 30lb mono is 520 yards. If in doubt, I would go with 30lb braid backing, or with 32lb copper. Either will definitely fit with 900 feet backing Unless I can't trust the specs, but I would believe it to be true. In comparison I do have a Seagate 60 and it does have 400 feet of 45# copper with 900 feet of 30 lb braid. It's capacity is 450 yards of 30 lb mono. If you have the reel try it, and let me know.
  16. Depends hugely on what test copper and its brand and what test backing and length you want to use.
  17. Here, try this spread sheet. Enter a number from 1 to 10 in ROW D in the cells that have a little black triangle in the corner. Under the X100 heading. that's the length of your backing or wire segments times 100 feet. Example: enter 4 and that will be 400 feet. In ROW C LINE 11 cell with the little black triangle, enter your reel capacity in yards of 30# monofilament. Be sure it's only for the specs found for THAT mono. The sheet will do the rest. Look in the right side of the sheet for the results. The cells turn green or red and display the amount of reserve left, or a negative reserve and the cell turns red, meaning that combination will not fit. Change the input for lines or reel and see the difference to compare on each combo. hope this helps. The other links I put up did not work so I deleted them. This one should work. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/13FzwTaoEhX8IpbeJW5PzH5ZZFOhLEsUZRtOp0jh0iDQ/edit?usp=sharing Forget about reading all this below, I know it's confusing and everyone just wants something softer to bang their head on. I've done this before, I know. I still see lots of questions on copper lengths and how much reel does it take to fit all of it with backing. I know some of us here, Legacy Rob, for one and others have posted specific reels that will handle certain amounts of backing and copper. That's a good thing! I have this formula that works for any reel, and you only need to find the specs for the reel you have, or you are looking for, in yardage based on 30# monofilament. The basic knowledge is right below this paragraph. When applied in simple division, multiplication, addition, and subtraction, this basic knowledge will give you answers to any combo of lines, wires, and reels you can put in your spread. I've done all the other goofy geometric to linear conversion, and have put it right here below this paragraph. Hope this makes it easier to understand. It's 5th grade math, and the answer might be 14 (Muskybob joke!), but probably not, unless you are really manly, and like huge farm equipment, and don't mind a skeleton of a fish after reeling it in... LOL! 77 feet of .033 45 lb copper in 1 cu in. (100 feet takes 1.3 cubic inches) 93 feet of .030 32 lb copper in 1 cu in. (100 feet takes 1.07 cubic inches) 689 feet of .011 30# power pro in 1 cu in. (100 feet takes 0.15 cubic inches) 370 feet of .015 50# power pro in 1 cu in. (100 feet takes 0.27 cubic inches) THIS ISN'T PART OF THE EQUATION BUT HAS TO DO WITH CHOOSING THE RIGHT REEL CAPACITY: 172 feet, OR 57 YARDS of .022 30 lb. mono in 1 cu inch (just for reel linear yardage to volume conversion so you can find the cubic inches of the spool) Look for the 30# monofiliment yardage capacity specs on the reel, or the packing box, or online. <<<<<<REMEMBER THIS FIRST>>>>>>*** ***FOR REEL CUBIC INCH CAPACITY CALCULATIONS, LOOK FOR THE SPECS ABOUT THE REEL, FOR THE YARDAGE CAPACITY FOR 30 # MONOFILIMENT LINE*** (it's what you want to find, so that it will fit the copper and backing before you spend your money on it) wise, right? Most everyone has a specific length of copper they want to setup on some kind of reel...Question is, which reel will fit it? You only have to look at the specs of a reel for the line capacity, in yards, of 30 lb mono. You have a simple calculation to do based on what I have already done for you. That's the fact that 57 yards of 30# mono fits in a cubic inch. You need to find the cubic inch capacity of the reel. Too bad the manufacturer never does that, but you can, and it is very simple. Here's how. Example, you need three basic components to know. #1 Your choice of backing...30# or 50# braid...how much is enough? Preferences vary by personal taste and use. No less than 450 feet unless you have pucker power! 900 feet is better for all purposes in my opinion. Just a preference of mine. #2 Your choice of copper strength...32# or 45#...the most common long coppers on either, and THIS IS FOR BLOOD RUN DIAMETERS ONLY, which is smaller diameter than some others that are .004 thicker..that extra thickness changes the outcome...less feet of copper by a significant amount. #3 Find your reel by looking at specs of yardage capacity of 30# monofiliment...NOT BRAID...mono! The first two COMPONENTS are easy! You know what you want, and I already calculated the 100 foot equals how many cubic inches, and fractions thereof, for you! You will find the best matching reel last, or in the case of a reel you have already, how much it will hold in cubic inches as it pertains to 30# mono lineage, yardage to cubic inches volume...nuf of that, its confusing. #3 requires you to do a simple math based on what I have already done for you on the 30# mono capacity...yes you can! You learned at least this much in school! SCENARIO: The reel you are looking at has specs. THIS ONE says it will hold 330 yards of monofiliment...look up above, FOR REEL CUBIC INCH CAPACITY CALCULATIONS...57 YARDS OF 30# MONO fits in 1 cu in. DIVIDE IT!...330 DIVIDED BY 57 EQUALS WHAT? The cubic inches capacity of the reel. It's 5.78 cubic inches! Write it down! Easy right? WITH A CALCULATOR... So how does that help you with finding out if that reel will accomodate your other components, which is, the backing and the copper?...simple math again, using my already calculated cubic inch capacities of line and wire ABOVE. Let's see, say you know you want a safety net of 900 feet of 50 lb power pro. How much will the backing take away from the capacity of that reel you're looking at? Up above again! 370 feet fits in a cubic inch, you have all 5.78 cubic inches YOU FIGURED OUT ALREADY ( wrote it down right?) on this reel at your disposal for the base of backing. You want 900 feet. Divide it! 900 divided by 370 equals what? The cubic inch space needed off the reel capacity..(2.43 FOR THE BACKING)... how much is left? Will it fit 600 feet of 45# blood run copper? Lets see! Subtract the backing! THIS REEL has 5.78 cubic inches to start, minus 2.43 for backing..It leaves 3.35 cubic inches for copper 45#...well, already you can see that 600 feet won't fit since only 77 feet will fit in 1 cubic inch. (77 X 3.35 is only 258 feet!) Its gonna take a much bigger reel and you only have 3.35 left, so its good for a 250 copper if you were looking for that. How do you know how big a reel you will need!...Simple math again...I wonder how much space 600 feet of 45# copper will need? Division again. 600 divided by 77 is what? You are figuring out how many cubic inches 600 feet of copper 45# takes up! It comes out to 7.79 cubic inches to fit that much copper. KEEP LOOKING FOR A LARGER REEL! It said 330 Yards, you need one for your backing and copper space in total of 2.43 plus 7.79. That's a reel with yardage specs of 30# mono large enough to hold 10.22 cubic inches of THAT SIZE mono line. What reel has that much room? Use the 57 yards per cubic inches from above and multiply it by 10.22 (57 X 10.22) equals 582.5 yard capacity. If the reel has 580 or more yards capacity listed for 30# mono, then it's large enough to fit 900 feet of 50lb backing with 600 feet of 45# copper from Blood Run. TIGHT! These are all are full reel capacity calculations. Advantage of line retrieve rate! SIMPLIFIED EVEN MORE HERE BELOW...( for those of you who KNOW the answer is 14 )LOL! 1st Choose your size of backing and the copper. For the backing section, (I do this first since it is the space you hold in reserve (for deployment methods and fish running off drag, etc., and not part of the copper depth management plan you have in mind) you add the space the copper takes last so you know the size reel you need for all things complete. You want 900 feet backing? Multiply corresponding cubic inches (IT'S UP ABOVE) for 100 feet by 9, you want 450 feet? Multiply corresponding cubic inches for 100 feet (LOOK UP TOP AGAIN) by 4.5, and so on. This will be your base of backing volume (in choosen pound test) on the reel. SAVE IT IN MEMORY OR WRITE IT DOWN. You will add it to the copper sections requirement of cubic inches that you will do next. EXAMPLE: REFER FROM UP ABOVE TOP^^^ (450 FEET) 50# POWER PRO BRAID .27 cu in X 4.5 = 1.2 CUBIC INCHES ROUNDED 30# POWER PRO BRAID .15 cu in x 4.5 = 0.7 CUBIC INCHES ROUNDED 900 feet is just .27 X 9 for 50#/ or .15 X 9 for 30# backing (2.43 and 1.35 total cubic inch for backing, respectively) as you can see, there is significant space advantage to using 30# backing on any reel. For the copper section, choose one STRENGTH or the other (you can compare them easily) (32# or 45#) and multiply the cubic inches IT corresponds to (IT'S UP ABOVE ^^^) by 1 up to 6 for 100 up to 600 foot sections OF COPPER. 1.5 up to 6.5 for sections of 150 feet up to 650 feet OF COPPER and so on. This will be the volume that your choosen "depth management section" copper size and length will take on the reel. EXAMPLE USEING THE REFERENCE FROM ABOVE^^^UP TOP! 600 feet of 45# copper 1.3 cu in X 6 and that is 7.8 CUBIC INCHES rounded 600 feet of 32# copper 1.07 cu in X 6 and that is 6.4 CUBIC INCHES rounded Again, as you can see, there is significant space saving with 32# copper over 45#. You can use a much smaller reel. Combined with 30# backing, you can use the smallest reel than 50/45 combo. HOWEVER, EVERYONE HAS THEIR PREFERENCE OF COPPER POUNDAGE, I USE EACH ON MY BOAT WITHOUT PREJUDICE! other reasons apply that involve more scientific SWAG estimates on my behalf. LOL! THE LAST PART (this is where you spend money on the big new shiny reel!)... is this part easy? Just divide the reel capacity, found from the specs, on the packing box, the reel, or online, for 30 pound mono by 57. You now have the cubic inch space needed for the backing and the copper of your choosen setup. IF YOU CAME UP WITH 10.22, A REEL YARDAGE CAPACITY OF OVER 580 FOR 30# MONO, YOU ARE GOOD TO GO WITH EITHER SIZE WIRE AND 900 FEET OF 50 LB BACKING. 45# copper being tight, 32# lots of room to spare, or spool on another couple hundred or so if ya feel like having your left arm bicep way larger than right arm...LOL! IF YOU CAME UP WITH 14, YOU NEED TO MOVE TO GLOUCESTER, MA. AND FIND THE GRAND BANKS FLEET! WE'RE ON, WE'RE ON, THAT'S A FISH'... THAT'S A SCREAMAHH! FISH ON DAVE MARCIANO and "HARD MERCHANDISE"! MARK
  18. What Rick Said... get it on a high speed reel and mark it every 100 feet with spray paint for about 3 to 4 feet of it. Something high contrast...black.. maybe florescent orange or green or all three for reference..(sometimes things get distracting and it helps to know which color is out). Drop it in behind the boat and play it out per color and let the color sit at the water surface..45 lb every 100 feet, 20 to 22 feet down. 32 lb every 100 feet, 18 to 20 feet down. No science in it, just duplicate the best bite zone you have experienced each particular day by color, or in between with a specific # of passes on the line guide of the reel. Simple, but, move it one side or the other or haul it in if you have a screamer on another line.
  19. I don't always fish for tuna...but when I do.. I just look for tuna boats! The fishing vessel "Fishin Frenzy" from Wicked Tuna Outer Banks..Oregon Inlet fleet harbor, NC
  20. Yes! That could be the problem!...was it a blue pill:huh:? Or one with blue specs...hmm :unsure: :mellow:..-_-
  21. I've already got one business where I hold a steering wheel, wouldn't want to replace it with another where it was 4 months out of a year and only 2 are really busy. This economy works against everyone. Potential customers are cutting back on discretionary spending, the charter businesses are having to raise rates or apply fuel surcharges due to increased operating costs. It's 180 degrees apart from a reasonable cost/profit margin. Other costs and annoying regulations haven't even been scratched here. Like the DOT in interstate transportation, you need your vessel inspection, you need your human being systems checked at the doctors office. It's like jumping through hoops of fire now on this stuff. Better not have ANY sugar or BP issues, mobility trouble, you will be gettimg checked at a lab every 3 months to remain active. You need background checks and finger printing and keep an identification card. I like just fishing for fun...I used to think driving the big truck was fun...not so much anymore. Same reason...and I don't like showing people how to drive around big trucks. .cause they don't want to learn. However showing a few new folks the fun we have on the big lake is what it's about...and THAT...is my recreation. Not gonna make it...annoying..
  22. Just think about all that white...it's warm sandy beaches...those ice huts are Tiki bars..those ice armor suits are babe's in bikinis..the glow from your propane heater is the sun...now don't you feel much better!
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