No more salmonalla or flu for me! Please! Anyway a guys got to sleep sometime and when I'm awake and healty I'm out the door fishin or huntin.
Dr. Pepper one of the problems is that the line is naturally abrasive and tends to eat your guides. This is made worse by the fine grit that occurs to varying degrees in our rivers....it becomes embedded in the braid creating essentially a file running across your rod guides and the ceramic insert on your levelwind reels. Hours and days of cast and reel will eventually see your guides and sometimes that insert ruined.
I have zero experience using this stuff on spinning gear but suspect that the impact is much less severe...maybe doesn't occur? The float and jig guys seem to like it.
FJ I think your right on about overtaxing gear with this stuff. I went with the 30 pd spider then prolines on med heavy lamiglass rods....killed both in two seasons. Ceramic inserts were not eroded away they blew away. Crushed the supports on the first guides on both rods. I also suspect theres a fatal crack in the butt section of one rod. Really dumb mistake on my part and a lesson learned. BTW: I'm not heavy on the drags but I am real heavy thumbed.
Anyway I do love the good qualities of this stuff and continue to use it for halibut, bottom fish, and jigging for saltwater salmon where it can't be beat and the rods can take it.
Like anything I won't totally dis a product and leave it up to you to decide on trying it...just be aware of the dangers. Some of my friends are using Fireline on their baitcasters and seem to like it so far. I'll stick to good quality mono.
Cough..cough...oh no not again
Gooose