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It is definitely stiffer, but it is the only flourescent flourocarbon........I thinkBeen doing some bass fishing at night using Stren blue/white flouracarbon. Have noticed that the line shows up good under the lights used for fishing at night BUT line seems more stiff than other f/c lines. Have also had some line breakage problems that I did not have with Seagur/invizx. Anyone else been using this line have any problems?![]()
I agree with using Trilene clear/blue fluorescent line. I'm just wondering if there's much advantage in using fluorescent fluorocarbon line vs. regular fluorescent mono line after it gets dark?
In flame green is what I use. No problem seeing it in the blacklight whatsoever. lol
P-line CXX Hi-Viz fluoroscent
bass pro blue flourescent mono line is pretty decent. Under blacklights, it looks like rope.
for bass I have always used Stren Original in florescent and have never had an issue. I use Berkley Big Game for my catfish setups (Its cheaper). It glows like a light saber in the black light but 15lb is the smallest ive ever seen. Ive been tempted to spool my flipping reel with it and see what happens.
I agree with jmatt1717. I've been using Stren Original florescent for years. I works well for me. As with any line, once in a while you'll get a bad spool. Just my thoughts.
One thing to remember with regards to lines. If you're talking about deeper lakes like Dale Hollow, where you're jigging in 40 or 50 ft, you REALLY want a superline. Fireline or some other low stretch line is pretty important.
Mono has a crazy amount of stretch. Take 50 ft of mono off your spool and then stretch it until you feel the "tension"....for every 10 ft of mono you can get about 10 inches of stretch if you are fishing in 50 ft of water, you might have out 70-80ft of water. That is a whole LOT of stretch when trying to set the hook.
Fireline or Floro...........
Later,
Geo
