How to load power pro onto bait caster

jimpittman

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Aug 14, 2002
Messages
102
Someone gave me a spool of 30# power pro at christmas and I want to load it on my calcutta bait caster. My question is " do I leave a cushion of the monofilament line on the spool or do I empty the spool completely and spool the new line on. Any tips for usin this type of line?
Thanks
jimpittman
 

stevecur

Petty Officer 3rd Class
Joined
Feb 22, 2012
Messages
85
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

The reason for using mono is to keep the braid from slipping or spinning on the reel. I tie my braid directly to the spool, then add a piece of tape to hold it from slipping. Been using this method for 8-9 years and have had no problems.
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
16,074
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

PowerPro Braided Line

All braided lines need to be spooled in a specific manner. Because of PowerPro's incredibly thin diameter and limited stretch, it is very important that your PowerPro line is packed tightly on your reel. When a braided line is first put onto your reel, ideally you should place a small piece of arbor tape (or electrical tape) onto the spool itself. The tape prevents the spool from slipping underneath your line. (TIP: If you do not use a few wraps of monofilament or tape as backing, the PowerPro will actually slip on the spool giving you the illusion that the reel has no drag.) Once the tape is in place, wrap your PowerPro around the spool 2-4 times. Next tie a "uni" knot and tighten around the spool. When braided line is being wound onto the reel, be sure to add pressure to your spool of PowerPro to guarantee that the line is being packed tightly. Once you are finished spooling up your reel, use your thumb to press down on the line on your spool. If it feels soft, you may need to re-spool your line and apply more pressure. However, if you press down and the line feels hard, then your line is packed tightly on the spool and you are ready to go fishing!

FWIW: #30 power Pro is notorious for mystery breaks. Heavier or lighter is OK, but the #30 has issues
 

gpfishingdude

Chief Petty Officer
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May 1, 2012
Messages
538
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

I use the power pro #30 on open faced spinning reels because I have too many problems using something with that thin of diameter on my casting reels. Most people will reccomend using 65-80# on casting reels because it doesn't tend to cut down into the coils and get stuck there as often. I know some people will say #30 won't do that if you coil the line on tight enough but I can't do that every time I crank in a lure. The power pro works great for the open faced spinning reels but after about six months it seems to weaken and you need to reverse it on the reel. It will cast an unbelievable distance with a medium sized open faced spinning reel and I don't get the rats nests from a casting reel or the memory problems from the mono.
 

gpfishingdude

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
538
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

I guess I didn't answer the question. You can use that tape for backing or just cover the spool with one layer or more of mono and then tie the mono to the power pro with a double uni knot.
 

Teamster

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Nov 8, 2010
Messages
1,923
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

I always use mono for backer,...........

On my trolling reels I run 100 yards of Power Pro,....

On my spinning reels usually 100 feet of Power Pro,....

Power Pro is expensive, Why have more on the reel than you need???
 

JB

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Mar 25, 2001
Messages
45,907
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

Yes. What he said ^^.

To fully load the spool takes too much Power Pro so I use about half a spool of mono before the power pro. I suppose if I were fishing salt, where the risk of getting "spooled" is greater, I would use less mono and more PP, but not even a musky is going to run out 200 yds of PP.
 

ryanskeeter

Cadet
Joined
Mar 18, 2013
Messages
14
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

Yes. What he said ^^.

To fully load the spool takes too much Power Pro so I use about half a spool of mono before the power pro. I suppose if I were fishing salt, where the risk of getting "spooled" is greater, I would use less mono and more PP, but not even a musky is going to run out 200 yds of PP.

i use baitcasters that have the holes in the spool and i never use tape or mono simply because the spool will not slip.never had a problem but to each his own i guess but i dont like using mono on my rod .in my experience i have had to many backlashes when using mono under the braid
 

geoffwga1

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Aug 8, 2010
Messages
394
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

Don't think that has anything to do with the mono.In fact what happens is with it being on there there is more weight on the spool ,therefore more inertia.In order to overcome this you have to educate your thumb instead of relying on the mechanical brake.
 

Tyme2fish

Commander
Joined
Feb 19, 2002
Messages
2,481
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

If you're really cheap,like me, when the terminal end of the PP starts to look a little old, strip the PP and tie the previous terminal end to your mono and re-spool and you'll have the fresh end of PP to use.
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
16,074
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

I always use mono for backer,...........

On my trolling reels I run 100 yards of Power Pro,....

On my spinning reels usually 100 feet of Power Pro,....

Power Pro is expensive, Why have more on the reel than you need???
Braided line is only expensive to those that view 4- $10 spools of monofilment as being cheaper than 1-$30 spool of braid.

I have #65 and #80 braid on all 21 trolling rods. 50- 75 yards of #80 dacron under 300 yards of braid. My spinners get 100 yards of #14 braid

I can't see cutting a spool of line into shorter pieces only to throw 1/2 of it away becouse I broke off and it's now to short to fish.

Can't see putting 100 feet of line on a spinning rod. Cast twice that far with a small spinner. 5 times that in the surf, let alone fish with it.
 

Teamster

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Nov 8, 2010
Messages
1,923
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

There is a big difference between ocean fishing and fishing in the mid-west,....

I'm rarely jigging with a spinning rod in depths over 30 feet,....Most of the time it is much shallower,..

As far as trolling for walleye I don't need more than 100 yards of power pro,.....Most of the time I only have 50 feet or less out behind the boards to achieve the depth I'm trolling,........
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
16,074
Re: How to load power pro onto bait caster

There is a big difference between ocean fishing and fishing in the mid-west,....

I'm rarely jigging with a spinning rod in depths over 30 feet,....Most of the time it is much shallower,..

As far as trolling for walleye I don't need more than 100 yards of power pro,.....Most of the time I only have 50 feet or less out behind the boards to achieve the depth I'm trolling,........

Not as much as you think. Its rare if I'm jigging over 35'. 15-30 ft. is typical. You don't throw plugs or crankbaits?

I fish boards as well. The outside lines are at 90-100' and the insides are 20-30 ft. I run 125' lines to my boards.
 
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