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Thread: if you don't use a Whip finisher?????

  1. #1
    Join Date
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    Default if you don't use a Whip finisher?????

    I always find questions about such tools as Whip finishers etc. to be interesting, every one throws in there Ideas on the subject with out information which might be highly useful. for those of you who don't use the whip finisher. What size hooks do you primarily tie on. do you get into the 20s or do you tend to tie in the 1/0 range?

    Inquiring minds want to know.

    Eric
    "Complexity is easy; Simplicity is difficult."
    Georgy Shragin
    Designer of ppsh41 sub machine gun

  2. #2
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    For most trout flies, except streamers, I use a double half-hitch and head cement and I can't remember the last time I had a fly come apart. For streamers and saltwater I usually hand whip-finish.

    Regards,
    Scott
    Last edited by ScottP; 02-01-2010 at 03:36 PM.

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    Default Hand Whip

    I normally hand whip finish all of my flies until I get down below size 20 hooks. Sizes 22, 24 or maybe even 26 requuire a Materalli Whip finisher. The only other time I use one is when my hands get really chapped and dry. Trying to whip finish with dry hands just tears up the thread for me. Picking up a whip finisher after every fly I tie gets tiresome to me. Just my way of doing things. There's no best way--just what suits you.
    Bruce

  4. #4

    Default

    Whip finish all my flies with my hand. Only because when i bought a kit to start tying 3 years ago there was no whip finisher in it. Bought one a while back but can't get to grips with it.

  5. #5
    Normand Guest

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    Quote Originally Posted by ScottP View Post
    For most trout flies, except streamers, I use a double half-hitch and head cement and I can't remember the last time I had a fly come apart. For streamers and saltwater I usually hand whip-finish.

    Regards,
    Scott
    ditto, except i half hitch everything

    does a certain range of hook sizes require anyone to use a whip finisher??

  6. #6
    Join Date
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    Default

    I tie bass bugs to size 22s.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    Rigby, Idaho
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    Default

    Never did get the hang of a whip finisher, but then I learned to hand finish when I learned to tie. I do three double half-hitches by hand on most flies. Down in the smaller range (ie: 18's and smaller) I use a half-hitch tool, which is nothing more than an old mechanical pencil tube.
    Been tying for almost thirty years now and this method works for me. I don't glue most flies due to the finish knot, with the exception of when I use mylar as a wing-case or something similar and I'll add a drop of cement.

    Kelly.
    Tight Lines,

    Kelly.

    "There will be days when the fishing is better than one's most optimistic forecast, others when it is far worse. Either is a gain over just staying home."

    Roderick Haig-Brown, "Fisherman's Spring"

  8. #8

    Default

    There's no 'requirement' to whip finish any fly.

    Why folks 'whip finish' is two fold.

    First, for years, everyone has been bombarded with the idea that whip finishing a fly is an issue of quality/skill and thus all good fly tyers do it. Probably not true.

    Second, a properly done whip finish ends with the loose end of the thread covered and held tightly under several wraps of thread. This protects the thread from catching on stuff and helps keep it from being cut by a fish's teeth. Whether that is a valid reason to do this is up to you. Many whip finishes are done backwards, with a portion of the tag end laying exposed on top of the wraps, which defeats this second purpose. Still a pretty secure knot, though.

    A quarter hitch, what most folks call a half hitch and what you make with the half hitch tools sold today, is not very secure by itself. It was designed to come loose easily, and it does. Two of them done with opposing loops makes a true half hitch. You can see you've done it correctly if the thread direction is reversed on the second one. Again, not very secure by itself. It's designed to hold under tension, but come undone easily without the lines tangling (it's an old sailing ship knot). What most of the folks who use 'half hitches' do is string several quarter hitches together in a row. A lot of these is a 'timber hitch', but only two or three is just two or three quarter hitches. Each knot in itself isn't all that secure, but two or three of them isn't bad. Add in a bit of head cement, and it's fine for any fly that's going to be fished.

    Probably the strongest knot available to fly tyers for securing the tag end of their tying thread isn't a knot at all. It's what they call the 'Zap Knot' or the super glue knot. Wetting a small section of the thread with a CA glue and then just wrapping it into place and cutting it close is certainly more secure than a string of quarter hitches or probably even a whip finish or two. As long as you don't mind dealing with the glue.

    The only requirement for a finish knot is that it holds up to your fishing expectations and you can execute it to your satisfaction.

    Buddy
    It Just Doesn't Matter....

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Buddy Sanders View Post
    Probably the strongest knot available to fly tyers for securing the tag end of their tying thread isn't a knot at all. It's what they call the 'Zap Knot' or the super glue knot. Wetting a small section of the thread with a CA glue and then just wrapping it into place and cutting it close is certainly more secure than a string of quarter hitches or probably even a whip finish or two. As long as you don't mind dealing with the glue.
    Buddy
    This is what I use 95% of the time.

    Tony P

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
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    Default

    I whip finish by hand, but have only tied sizes 8 to 14 thus far. I chose to do it by hand to both see if I could do it and because purchasing/reaching for a tool to tie knots just seems like a waste.

    I use a whip finish knot because it is provably stronger than a series of hitches and, to my eye, looks better. I hit it with head cement anyway, so my flies are probably tanks.

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