04-20-2012, 11:14 PM
I used p-line fluoro and didn't like it. Every time you get a little kink in the line, it snaps. It was like wire in that aspect.
Fluorocarbon crystals are a very hard substance. It has a very high molecular weight and is really dense. I think that P-line just didn't quite get their formula right. It is really sensitive, which is nice, but the fragility of it isn't a good trade off.
I have noticed that stiffness is the biggest problem I have with different fluorocarbon lines. Trilene 100% Fluoro, BPS Fluoro, P-line, Vicious, all have noticeably too much stiffness for my liking.
Seaguar abrazX and invisX are super limp lines, as manageable as quality mono. My Fav. Invisx for drop shotting and abrazx for my baitcasters.
Gary Yamamoto's Sugoi Fluorocarbon is really good.
Then you get into the really expensive lines like Sunline Shooter, Seaguar Tatsu, Toray Bawo, etc. Those line all rule, but you'll get plenty of quality from a 20 dollar spool of fluoro, you don't need to spend 50 bucks.
[signature]
Fluorocarbon crystals are a very hard substance. It has a very high molecular weight and is really dense. I think that P-line just didn't quite get their formula right. It is really sensitive, which is nice, but the fragility of it isn't a good trade off.
I have noticed that stiffness is the biggest problem I have with different fluorocarbon lines. Trilene 100% Fluoro, BPS Fluoro, P-line, Vicious, all have noticeably too much stiffness for my liking.
Seaguar abrazX and invisX are super limp lines, as manageable as quality mono. My Fav. Invisx for drop shotting and abrazx for my baitcasters.
Gary Yamamoto's Sugoi Fluorocarbon is really good.
Then you get into the really expensive lines like Sunline Shooter, Seaguar Tatsu, Toray Bawo, etc. Those line all rule, but you'll get plenty of quality from a 20 dollar spool of fluoro, you don't need to spend 50 bucks.
[signature]