A Condition known as “Creep”
No I am not referring to any of my students over the last ten years, however some have suffered from it. Widely referred to in the Fly Casting world, “Creep”, is a condition which plagues most entry level Fly Casters, and can progress into Intermediate Level Casters if left un-diagnosed. Simply put, “Creep” refers to angular rotation of the Fly Rod early in the Casting Stroke with little or no application of power.
A number of factors can be looked at which can cause this condition, but is easily recognized by a quick ramp up in the application of power, almost too late, and inefficient loop formation usually ending up on the water in an un-straightened heap. Sound familiar? I thought it might, and if you were to view it on the “Casting Analyzer” graph, you would see a shallow hump followed by a relatively long depression, and suddenly the line on the graph would rise significantly. A sudden surge in power application.
For this writing I will suggest that one of the causes is likely the presence of slack Fly Line somewhere along the length of the Fly Rod or beyond the tip. Consider this, that if no slack line were present and the Rod was held parallell to the casting surface, a load would be placed on the Fly Rod immediately by simply lifting it. From this initial lift a smooth application of power could be applied to a point where the Rod should be stopped in either the forward or backcast. On the “Casting Analyzer” the graph would appear as a fluid continuous upward curve, no rapid rise, indicating considerably less effort to accomplish in effect more work. Sounds simple, and it really is, however as mentioned, there are a number of other factors that could be involved as well. More on the subject to follow….
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February 26th, 2008 at 2:44 pm
Hey Brian - how much, if at all, does weight forward line vs. double tapered line affect creep?
February 27th, 2008 at 10:47 am
Aaron
The answer you are looking for lies within the very first paragraph. “Simply put, “Creep” refers to angular rotation of the Fly Rod early in the Casting Stroke with little or no application of power”. This is human/operator error not related to the type of Flyline used. There is no doubt that the differences in the way the two different types of flylines un-roll during casting can be calculated, however the only effect on creep would be psycological not mechanical. For comparison the AFTMA rates flylines in grains over a 30ft length regardless of their taper. I have witnessed this condition many times and when diagnosed and corrected with my most recent student, considerable length was gained in distance with less effort. Something we all hope to achieve in the long run. Hope this helps! Please let me know if you recieve an auto response.
Thanks
April 12th, 2010 at 8:54 am
По моему мнению Вы не правы. Предлагаю это обсудить. Пишите мне в PM….
Кредитный специалист No I am not referring to any of my students over the last ten years, however some have suffered from it…..
April 21st, 2010 at 6:25 am
Теперь всё понятно, благодарю за помощь в этом вопросе….
Продавец консультант Simply put, “Creep” refers to angular […….
May 20th, 2010 at 12:43 am
дааа вот бы мне скорость побыстрее…
Офис менеджер Simply put, “Creep” refers to angular […….
June 10th, 2010 at 4:25 am
Please e-mail me your contacts. I have a question
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