Hey Ryan,
Heres some dialog from Fliflicker from a while back. I asked for "sinking line help"
Justin,
The Airflo Depth Finder 200 grain works well on my 6 wt. in small surf and in the bay.
Dave
build your own shooting head with 30ft of Rio T-8 (it will weigh 240g @ 30ft) and Rio's blue intermediate (20# / 0.024") powerflex core running line. it will match up nicely on your 6wt.
Justin,
I'm with James, regarding a shooting head setup. I like the Frog Hair shooting lines for a running line; their 80# stuff for bigger fish (for good grip), and the 40# stuff for most light surf work. You can 'loop-to-loop' it with your backing and the shooting head, using 30' of Rio T-8 (240 grains) for slower sinking requirements or 17' of Rio T-14 (238 grains) when a faster trip to the bottom is needed and/or backcasting room is limited. You may need to use a little more or less shooting head than these recommendations, depending on the flex of your stick. Experiment with different lengths from the above starting points until the rod is slightly overloaded, and then take off smaller increments from there until you get it just right! (WARNING! Cut the head back in small amounts at a time and take your time balancing the rod - once you cut the head it can never get longer again) The good news about these setups is that you can cast them 100' easily, and the Frog Hair shooting line picks up and transmits every "tick" on the bottom as your fly searches out it's prey. No stretch either, so good solid hookups when strip striking. Limited memory as well, just like mine!
All that said, the intergrated lines (e.g. Teeny TS lines, S.A. Striper lines, etc.) are great lines, and are easier to cast for most folks, at least until one gets used to shooting head techniques. If you're going to fish in calmer waters I'd go integrated - in rough surf, with some sort of shooting head system. The latter also really excels when fishing from a kayak or small boat!
Kim Z.
As Kim Z has suggested I would go with a shooting head system for your 6 wt...I started off in the surf fishing a integrated shooting head system and thought it was good enough....but once I switched over to 30 ft of T-8 with a mono running line....my cast distance improved but more importantly my line control improved....mono has much less stretch compared with the running portion of an integrated line and you're able to feel all the little strikes and takes.....if you do go with a shooting head system don't forget to buy some stripping gloves....most of these running lines are slicker than a integrated running line and you need to use the gloves to grab the line....also...just me...I feel that 200 grain is a bit light for my six weights....not sure what you're throwing.....I use an Echo and a Sage XP.....the Rio T-8 is awesome on these rods or I would use a integrated line.....again this is just preference......
Adam
I'm very happy with the performance of SA Streamer Express in 200grns on my 6wt (Redington CPS SW ver). The integrated running line is fairly resistant to tangling (I give it a good stretch before fishing) and is easy to grip while stripping the line in.
I don't bomb out 100ft casts with this setup but, in most cases, I've never needed anywhere close to 100ft casts to get into fish in the surf. If it took 100ft casts to routinely get into fish, I'd be using a shooting head system (Rio's T-8 head mated to some sort of mono running line, most likely 30lb Suffix Elite).
one thing to keep in mind is that grain weight DOES NOT determine how fast your line will sink, line density does. faster sink rate = better line control in bigger surf / current. this is why a 240g Type 8 head can and will keep you on the bottom in big hydraulics better than a 400g type 6 head.
call me crazy but i have never felt the need to break out any of my bigger sticks (9-10-11 wts) for the surf regardless of the wind, surf or current. most of the time i am throwing a 5wt or my 6wt TiCr X. if i am fishing deeper water or there is bigger surf / current, i switch lines from my T-8 head to my rio outbound type 8 (wf6) integrated head that sinks at 8-9 ips (inches per second). this gets me on the bottom and keeps me there.
James is correct.
It is the density/diameter ratio that affects sink rates. The smaller the diameter the lass drag resistance. The denser the weight material (lead, tungsten, etc) the easier to reduce overall diameter.
Don't forget there are 500 grain floating lines (large diameter is necessary to disperse and float the weight), just as there are 100 grain sinking lines (small diameter concentrates weight and reduces drag).
I think I gave you this before, but there was period where Fliflicker lost months of posts (some back up issue
and it's no longer in the archives. I'm glad I copied it. Maybe not totally streamer based, but I think I see where your going with this
Justin