Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: dennisK on September 21, 2020, 11:46:32 AM
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I'm going to try this on the old baitcaster.... Maybe it works...
how to get a smoother fishing reel drag with a pencil
youtube link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2RNMlHXvF4
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it might also make the drag less strong. so if your reel is rated for 10lb drag, after applying the pencil lead it might be 8lb. I am also not sure about the effect of the loose lead on the bearings. Possibly none.
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it might also make the drag less strong. so if your reel is rated for 10lb drag, after applying the pencil lead it might be 8lb. I am also not sure about the effect of the loose lead on the bearings. Possibly none.
Well the hack really did work - but i recall seeing vids about folks using powdered graphite on their bearings to make them silky smooth ( a few youtube vids on that)....
My reel drag starts up faster/smoother with the pencil's graphite but i can definitely tell i lost a little in top end pressure.....But i don't mind that trade off. After all you can thumb the spool to slow things as well...
Oh and does anyone grease their drags (abu multi drag setup like in a 5500)- I know cals grease is popular....but can a simple lithium grease lightly applied improve rotational friction of the drags as well...
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Oh and does anyone grease their drags (abu multi drag setup like in a 5500)- I know cals grease is popular....but can a simple lithium grease lightly applied improve rotational friction of the drags as well...
No need to grease the carbon washers of today. With the cloth washers of yesteryear, it made sense, but greasing the carbon drags in modern reels actually reduces their efficacy. I'd rather sacrifice a degree of smoothness for that extra edge required when you need to prevent 30+ pounds of angry chinook from taking you for a ride downstream.
I find that it is much more important to keep the worm gear and pawl properly cleaned and oiled, so that's what gets my attention during the season. The drag let's you know when it is in need of some TLC well in advance (just like car braks do).
The worm gear doesn't. It usually just fails if neglected.
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graphite is hard on any aluminum parts withing the reel, its eats it up slowly i would recommend against using graphite.
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it might also make the drag less strong. so if your reel is rated for 10lb drag, after applying the pencil lead it might be 8lb. I am also not sure about the effect of the loose lead on the bearings. Possibly none.
I doubt there's any lead in modern pencils. They're mostly graphite for the last 60 years.