
How to Spool New Fishing Line Onto a Reel
from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can EditYou should replace your fishing line at least once per season. If you fish frequently, you may have to change it even more often. If you replace line incorrectly, you may have problems with line twist. Here is how to do it right.
Steps
- Take the old line off the
reel, then run the end of the new line up through the rod guides to the
reel and tie it to the spool of the reel.
- Put a pencil into the new spool and have somebody hold
it. Or use a reel filling station that you can buy at a tackle shop to
hold the spool of line. To avoid twists, make sure the line feeds off the
top of the supply reel.
- For a baitcasting reel, fill
to within a quarter inch of the outer rim. Keep a bit of pressure on the
line so it doesnt get loopy and tangled.
- For a spinning reel (the kind
that hangs down underneath the rod), you place the supply reel on the
floor. You need to determine whether to place it label side up, or down,
in order to minimize introducing line twists during the loading process.
This needs to be done for every supply reel, as the direction the line has
been loaded can vary from reel to reel, even among the same brands of
line. The following 3 steps detail how to determine which side of the
supply reel should face up.
- Look down at the top
of your spinning reel, and turn the handle as if you are retrieving the
line. Note the direction that the bail rotates around the spool. Most
spinning reels rotate in a clockwise direction.
- Examine your supply
spool, and find the end of the line (the lead). It may be secured by
tape. Orient the supply spool so that the lead is at the top and the
label is facing you.
- If the lead is coming
off the spool in a clockwise direction (i.e., if the free end of the line
were an arrow, it would be point to your left), you want to place the
supply reel on the floor label side up. Otherwise, you want to place it
on the floor label side down. If your spinning reel turns in a
counter-clockwise direction, you want to reverse this.
- First lift the bail arm so it
will loop line as you reel and then run the end of the new line up through
the rod guides to the reel, and tie onto the spool. Once the line is tied
onto the spool lower the bail arm.
- Hold the line between two
fingers to keep it taut as you reel a couple of feet onto the reel.
- Stop reeling and dip the rod
toward the spool on the floor. If the line twists onto itself, turn the
spool over before putting more line on. If the line is okay, go ahead and
finish.
- For a spinning reel, a
good way to spool the line is to take a soft cotton cloth and hold the
line in the cloth at about the first eye. Apply a good amount of tension,
so the line does not spool loose, and you can real as fast as you like.
- Fill the reel only until it
is about a quarter inch from the rim.
- For a closed-faced reel (like
the Zebco 33, etc), fill it the same way you do a spinning reel, except
make sure you run the line through the hole in the reel face before tying
it to the reel spool. Screw the face back on before reeling on the new
line.
Tips
- Using a line conditioner to
treat your filler spools prior to filling your reel spool will help the
line wind on your reel better with less twist. Regular use of a quality
line conditioner before and after fishing will protect your line and help
it last longer and give you longer more accurate casts.
- To avoid loops when you fish, keep tension on the line whenever you are
reeling. If you need to, hold the line between your thumb and finger in
front of the reel.
- If you do get a lot of twists
in your line, take the lure off and just let a lot of line out behind the
boat as you go. This will take the loops out.
- If you do not have a boat,
just take off the lure and tie your line to a post. Walk away, spooling
out line behind you. Now have somebody cut the line free so you can reel
it back on, but be sure to keep tension on it with your fingers.
- Take the old line to a line
recycling bin. You can find these at most tackle shops.
- If you are using braided
line, make sure you put cloth tape or a layer of mono on the reel first.
Otherwise the braid will slip around the spool and you wont be able to set
the hook.
- If you are a real tight-wad,
you might want to take the old line off onto a different spool, then
re-spool it on back wards. That way the used part is down by the bottom
and fresher line is up where you use it.
- To attach the new line to the
spool, you can tie a regular square knot, but make sure you get the knot
snug against the spool so it doesnt slip. First aid tape on the reel spool
really helps with the slippage problem.
- Closed-face reels do not hold
much line, so make sure to unscrew the cover now and then to check how
much youve got on there.
Warnings
- NEVER dispose of old line by
throwing it on the ground or into the water. Birds and fish get tangled in
old line and die.
- Biting the line can chip or
break your teeth.
Related wikiHows
- Look down at the top
of your spinning reel, and turn the handle as if you are retrieving the
line. Note the direction that the bail rotates around the spool. Most
spinning reels rotate in a clockwise direction.
- Examine your supply
spool, and find the end of the line (the lead). It may be secured by
tape. Orient the supply spool so that the lead is at the top and the
label is facing you.
- If the lead is coming
off the spool in a clockwise direction (i.e., if the free end of the line
were an arrow, it would be point to your left), you want to place the
supply reel on the floor label side up. Otherwise, you want to place it
on the floor label side down. If your spinning reel turns in a
counter-clockwise direction, you want to reverse this.
- For a spinning reel, a
good way to spool the line is to take a soft cotton cloth and hold the
line in the cloth at about the first eye. Apply a good amount of tension,
so the line does not spool loose, and you can real as fast as you like.
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