MPH of double 10's
splash
Posted 8/25/2017 8:26 AM (#875466)
Subject: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 17


Anyone have any idea what the approx. mph speed is when burning double 10's with a tranx hg.
Thanks in advance Jim
BNelson
Posted 8/25/2017 8:36 AM (#875469 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Location: Contrarian Island
3 to 3.5, 8s can probably get em goin 4 to 4.2

Edited by BNelson 8/25/2017 8:41 AM
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 9:40 AM (#875477 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


Top speed for a d10 generally is not reel specific, it is user specific. In other words the user will generally achieve the same speed with a HG as they would a PG.

To further complicate the answer, not all d10 can hold the same speed. Meaning one may blow out at 2mph another at 2.2mph.

For a reference 2mph is not quite 36" per second. So when your fishing and if you know your reels IPT you can ball park your baits MPH by the cranks your doing per second.

So to answer my guess would be low 2mph would be a "burn", and under 2mph is a days average
BNelson
Posted 8/25/2017 9:43 AM (#875478 - in reply to #875477)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Location: Contrarian Island
your statement:
"Top speed for a d10 generally is not reel specific, it is user specific. In other words the user will generally achieve the same speed with a HG as they would a PG."

totally false. I've used both. the HG brings them in faster...that would be like saying a winch and an HG bring them in at the same speed... ummm no...
. your speed guess is off.. a few of us have figured out the speed and you're low...

Edited by BNelson 8/25/2017 10:05 AM
Abu7000
Posted 8/25/2017 10:01 AM (#875481 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 217


I am not sure about the mph, but the HG is much faster than the PG. I always believed there was little difference between the HG and the PG until I bought an HG a few weeks ago. It was quite a shock to experience the difference between the two reels. When using the stock handle the HG speed easily tops the PG, and when using the Trinidad handle the difference is even more pronounced without undue effort. I am getting more speed with much less effort using the HG with the Trinidad handle. When I use the PG, it takes much more effort to achieve even a moderate speed. I wish I tried the PG years ago. Brad Nelson has been telling us this for years, and he is right.

Edited by Abu7000 8/25/2017 10:03 AM
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 11:07 AM (#875486 - in reply to #875478)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


BNelson - 8/25/2017 10:43 AM

your statement:
"Top speed for a d10 generally is not reel specific, it is user specific. In other words the user will generally achieve the same speed with a HG as they would a PG."

totally false. I've used both. the HG brings them in faster...that would be like saying a winch and an HG bring them in at the same speed... ummm no...
. your speed guess is off.. a few of us have figured out the speed and you're low...


I think people get mixed up ease of turning and top speed. While the HG will bring in more IPT but it harder to reel, while the PG bring in less IPT its easier to turn. The easier turning allows for a faster rpm of the crank handle, that makes up the difference of IPT.

Reason i wrote the word "Generally" (sixth word in the quote) is for the extreme example of a winch compared to HG. The winch has a limiting factor of being so slow on IPT it limits of how many rpm a user can turn to make up the difference.

I would put money down that a person can turn a pg about 1.43 times faster than a HG with the same bait. MPH depends on how much muscle a person can put to the reel, its different than IPT that is measured only at the reel

While you and the few you mentioned may have a higher mph, great. I say that 1 rev per second with my HG is difficult to maintain (2.44mph) on hard pulling baits like D10 mentioned from the OP. If your talking short burst yes faster speeds achieved but that cant be done for X amount of time, everyone is different.

Edited by anzomcik 8/25/2017 11:19 AM
BNelson
Posted 8/25/2017 11:18 AM (#875488 - in reply to #875486)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Location: Contrarian Island
you're making it way more confusing than it is..
stand next to me with your PG, I will use an HG... we cast the same bait at the same time, mine will be to the boat faster with us both exerting the same force on the handle.... it's really that simple.

Edited by BNelson 8/25/2017 11:19 AM
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 11:21 AM (#875490 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


I have done races with friends like you said, then switched reels. I won both time. MPH is mainly driven by user, if you said we each get 15 cranks then the HG would win do to the IPT and stipulation of the cranks


Edited by anzomcik 8/25/2017 11:22 AM
BNelson
Posted 8/25/2017 11:34 AM (#875494 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Location: Contrarian Island
same force on each reel, the HG wins.. the speed is amplified even more with a fairly strong angler reeling it in....
ToddM
Posted 8/25/2017 11:57 AM (#875496 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 20181


Location: oswego, il
My money is on mayweather.
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 12:07 PM (#875498 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


I believe if the force you applied to both HG and pg the pg handle would turn 1.4 times for every 1 turn of the hg
Thuawk
Posted 8/25/2017 12:15 PM (#875499 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 133


I own both amd there's no way that my pg would touch the Hg.... 0% chance
tackleaddict
Posted 8/25/2017 12:24 PM (#875502 - in reply to #875499)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 431


I love this battle, it never gets old.
ajrod88
Posted 8/25/2017 12:34 PM (#875506 - in reply to #875502)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 163


I DO NOT have a degree in physics..... but I have still caught a few muskys!

Edited by ajrod88 8/25/2017 12:36 PM
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 12:42 PM (#875508 - in reply to #875499)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


If you apply a force of "X" to a bait it should move at "Y" mph. Lets assign numbers to this.

Force of 10 to a reel handle will generate a bait to move 4mph with a HG (i made up numbers)
So with a force of 10 to a reel handle of a PG will generate how many mph? (answer 4mph) because the force is the same. the reel is just the mechanism to pull the line, if force is the same so is the speed.

Some people are saying that if useing the same force "X" on two reels, (PG and HG). you will get a different speed. So to those people I ask where did the speed go? Lets take it one step further at what gear ratio could you make the bait go 100mph using the same 10 force in the example above? Because thats what your saying same force to different gear ratio equalls different speed.

So if you take a tranx HG 6.7/1, and make it 67/1 (10 times faster ratio, bringing in 430" IPT) using my example of force of 10 would that reel bring in the bait 10X faster????

Lucky Craft Man
Posted 8/25/2017 1:04 PM (#875512 - in reply to #875478)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 242


BNelson - 8/25/2017 9:43 AM

your statement:
"Top speed for a d10 generally is not reel specific, it is user specific. In other words the user will generally achieve the same speed with a HG as they would a PG."

totally false. I've used both. the HG brings them in faster...that would be like saying a winch and an HG bring them in at the same speed... ummm no...
. your speed guess is off.. a few of us have figured out the speed and you're low...


I have the Winch and the HG. I can pretty much get the D10's to come in around the same speed (and they both wear me out). With the "lower resistance" of the Winch, I can wind that sucker faster than I can with the HG, but since the IPT on the Winch are lower, my faster winding essentially allows me to make up for that lack of line pick-up the HG has. I could really crank around the HG to get those blades to move (assuming they don't pop out of the water), but I am using a ton of energy and my forearms are about blow up, so that is not a sustainable retrieve.
tackleaddict
Posted 8/25/2017 1:26 PM (#875513 - in reply to #875508)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 431


anzomcik - 8/25/2017 12:42 PM

If you apply a force of "X" to a bait it should move at "Y" mph. Lets assign numbers to this.

Force of 10 to a reel handle will generate a bait to move 4mph with a HG (i made up numbers)
So with a force of 10 to a reel handle of a PG will generate how many mph? (answer 4mph) because the force is the same. the reel is just the mechanism to pull the line, if force is the same so is the speed.

Some people are saying that if useing the same force "X" on two reels, (PG and HG). you will get a different speed. So to those people I ask where did the speed go? Lets take it one step further at what gear ratio could you make the bait go 100mph using the same 10 force in the example above? Because thats what your saying same force to different gear ratio equalls different speed.

So if you take a tranx HG 6.7/1, and make it 67/1 (10 times faster ratio, bringing in 430" IPT) using my example of force of 10 would that reel bring in the bait 10X faster????



Allright, I'm down to fight about reeling in double 10's. Force is relative to mass and acceleration, not velocity. force = mass x acceleration. If there is were no wind resistance or rolling resistance, your car could maintain constant speed with no force applied (drops mic)
BNelson
Posted 8/25/2017 1:36 PM (#875514 - in reply to #875506)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Location: Contrarian Island
A winch bringing them in as fast a 500hg!!??? Omg. I have now heard it all.


Edited by BNelson 8/25/2017 1:51 PM
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 2:09 PM (#875516 - in reply to #875513)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


tackleaddict - 8/25/2017 2:26 PM

anzomcik - 8/25/2017 12:42 PM

If you apply a force of "X" to a bait it should move at "Y" mph. Lets assign numbers to this.

Force of 10 to a reel handle will generate a bait to move 4mph with a HG (i made up numbers)
So with a force of 10 to a reel handle of a PG will generate how many mph? (answer 4mph) because the force is the same. the reel is just the mechanism to pull the line, if force is the same so is the speed.

Some people are saying that if useing the same force "X" on two reels, (PG and HG). you will get a different speed. So to those people I ask where did the speed go? Lets take it one step further at what gear ratio could you make the bait go 100mph using the same 10 force in the example above? Because thats what your saying same force to different gear ratio equalls different speed.

So if you take a tranx HG 6.7/1, and make it 67/1 (10 times faster ratio, bringing in 430" IPT) using my example of force of 10 would that reel bring in the bait 10X faster????



Allright, I'm down to fight about reeling in double 10's. Force is relative to mass and acceleration, not velocity. force = mass x acceleration. If there is were no wind resistance or rolling resistance, your car could maintain constant speed with no force applied (drops mic)


Better pick up your mic, because you skipped newtons first law of motion.
Newton's First Law of Motion (Law of Inertia): Every body continues in its state of rest or of uniform speed in a straight line unless it is compelled to change that state by a net force acting on it.

Defination of net force:
Net force is the unbalanced force acting on an object. When two or more forces act on an object, the resultant (vector sum) of the forces is the net force.

Nershi
Posted 8/25/2017 2:10 PM (#875517 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Location: MN
I think the HG pulls all size blades at higher speeds with less effort than the PG. I have had the PG for a few years and picked up an HG before this season. At first I did not like the HG for big blades and it even seemed like more work for small blades but after a while I realized when you crank the HG handle at a slower comfortable pace you are still obtaining speeds faster than the PG reeling as fast as possible (or close to it). I don't have any physics to back this up. I am just basing it on the wear and tear on my arms and wrists from long days of casting different size blades. It feels weird at first because it feels like you are slow rolling with the HG but the bait is zipping along. This is with full spools on both reels fwiw.
stdevos
Posted 8/25/2017 2:19 PM (#875518 - in reply to #875508)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 416


Location: Madtown, WI

anzomcik - 8/25/2017 12:42 PM If you apply a force of "X" to a bait it should move at "Y" mph. Lets assign numbers to this. Force of 10 to a reel handle will generate a bait to move 4mph with a HG (i made up numbers) So with a force of 10 to a reel handle of a PG will generate how many mph? (answer 4mph) because the force is the same. the reel is just the mechanism to pull the line, if force is the same so is the speed. Some people are saying that if useing the same force "X" on two reels, (PG and HG). you will get a different speed. So to those people I ask where did the speed go? Lets take it one step further at what gear ratio could you make the bait go 100mph using the same 10 force in the example above? Because thats what your saying same force to different gear ratio equalls different speed. So if you take a tranx HG 6.7/1, and make it 67/1 (10 times faster ratio, bringing in 430" IPT) using my example of force of 10 would that reel bring in the bait 10X faster????

 

You're not "wrong", it's just that you're wrong

Simple thought experiment - You have three bicycles, each locked into gear 1, 10 and 20.... do you really think you could reach the same top speed with all three? Gears matter.

anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 2:25 PM (#875519 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


When top speed isn't the fastest the unit can theroticaly move then yes. We are talking about a terminal velocity to a given amount of force. Please refer to my post you quoted. If force is the same speed will be the same. The gears may be taller that means it turns it slower. Speed will increase as force increases
ToddM
Posted 8/25/2017 2:42 PM (#875520 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 20181


Location: oswego, il
Is the test subject wearing a buff and a wind shirt?
14ledo81
Posted 8/25/2017 2:43 PM (#875521 - in reply to #875520)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 4269


Location: Ashland WI
ToddM - 8/25/2017 2:42 PM

Is the test subject wearing a buff and a wind shirt?


McGregor is buff. Does that mean he can beat Mayweather?
stdevos
Posted 8/25/2017 2:50 PM (#875524 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 416


Location: Madtown, WI
I think you are the only one talking about.... well, whatever it is that you're talking about.

You said "In other words the user will generally achieve the same speed with a HG as they would a PG." and have been trying to defend it since. It's the same as saying a bicyclist will generally achieve the same speed in first gear as they would in 10th gear. Think about it buddy, but stop thinking so hard.
fishhawk50
Posted 8/25/2017 2:57 PM (#875526 - in reply to #875520)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 1416


Location: oconomowoc, wi
ToddM - 8/25/2017 2:42 PM

Is the test subject wearing a buff and a wind shirt?

i wore a buff last week in canada.. i could not get my dbl 10's over 2.589 mph! any ideas why?
MuskyMatt71
Posted 8/25/2017 3:06 PM (#875527 - in reply to #875517)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 141


Location: Minnetonka
Nershi - 8/25/2017 2:10 PM

I think the HG pulls all size blades at higher speeds with less effort than the PG. I have had the PG for a few years and picked up an HG before this season.


The difference becomes very evident with 13s. Throw them with an HG and it's pretty tough. Switch over to your PG and you'll definitely notice how much easier it is, same speed.

As for how fast are tens going...Well, if you assume that "burning" is two full handle turns per second with an HG(accurate?).

Then...on a fully spooled reel, you're getting ~43 inches per turn.

So, 43 IPT times 2 turns per second = 86 inches per second, or 4.88MPH.

Take into account a slight loss of IPT at the end of a full cast and we'll call it 4.8 MPH.




Edited by MuskyMatt71 8/25/2017 3:08 PM
Nershi
Posted 8/25/2017 3:24 PM (#875529 - in reply to #875527)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Location: MN
MuskyMatt71 - 8/25/2017 3:06 PM

Nershi - 8/25/2017 2:10 PM

I think the HG pulls all size blades at higher speeds with less effort than the PG. I have had the PG for a few years and picked up an HG before this season.


The difference becomes very evident with 13s. Throw them with an HG and it's pretty tough. Switch over to your PG and you'll definitely notice how much easier it is, same speed.



I threw supermodels a bunch last weekend and I disagree with this. I can't turn the handle very fast with the HG and supermodels but the bait is still going faster than PG reeling it as fast as I can.

I really think it is a mental thing. It feels so slow while reeling but the bait is moving quick.
BNelson
Posted 8/25/2017 3:25 PM (#875530 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Location: Contrarian Island
have you timed 2 full cranks with an HG?
MuskyMatt71
Posted 8/25/2017 3:29 PM (#875532 - in reply to #875529)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 141


Location: Minnetonka
Nershi - 8/25/2017 2:10 PM

I threw supermodels a bunch last weekend and I disagree with this. I can't turn the handle very fast with the HG and supermodels but the bait is still going faster than PG reeling it as fast as I can.

I really think it is a mental thing. It feels so slow while reeling but the bait is moving quick.


That's interesting. I suppose it comes down to personal preference. I'd rather make more revolutions of the handle with less torque (PG) than have more torque with less revolutions (HG).

I gotta go back to work now.
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 3:30 PM (#875533 - in reply to #875524)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


stdevos - 8/25/2017 3:50 PM

I think you are the only one talking about.... well, whatever it is that you're talking about.

You said "In other words the user will generally achieve the same speed with a HG as they would a PG." and have been trying to defend it since. It's the same as saying a bicyclist will generally achieve the same speed in first gear as they would in 10th gear. Think about it buddy, but stop thinking so hard.


I will continue because people are not understanding why that can be true. Because you insist on have the extreme of 1st and 10th I will go with it. Say in 1st gear you can go 10mph, when you achieve and maintain 10mph in 10th gear you are exerting the same force as you would going 10mph in first.

For you to go 10mph on a bike it requires X amount of force regardless of gearing. Assuming the gear can achieve that speed.

That's why I am saying a terminal velocity or maxing out the speed a given force achieves

Edited by anzomcik 8/25/2017 3:33 PM
happy hooker
Posted 8/25/2017 3:31 PM (#875534 - in reply to #875530)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 3136


Yeah but which one corners better
MuskyMatt71
Posted 8/25/2017 3:33 PM (#875535 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 141


Location: Minnetonka
Bnelson, I haven't timed that accurately. I watched a video of myself burning 8s (clearly different) with an HG and it came out to about 25 revolutions per 10 seconds, so I cut that back to 2 per second for 10s. I don't have much going on today in the office...
ToddM
Posted 8/25/2017 3:33 PM (#875536 - in reply to #875526)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 20181


Location: oswego, il
fishhawk50 - 8/25/2017 2:57 PM

ToddM - 8/25/2017 2:42 PM

Is the test subject wearing a buff and a wind shirt?

i wore a buff last week in canada.. i could not get my dbl 10's over 2.589 mph! any ideas why? ;-)


The whole problem seems to be inches per crank.
Jeremy
Posted 8/25/2017 3:34 PM (#875537 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 1126


Location: Minnesota.
There it is again, I'm getting that weird buzzing sound, dagnabit...
BNelson
Posted 8/25/2017 3:34 PM (#875538 - in reply to #875534)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Location: Contrarian Island
still thinking too hard... you want to stand next to me and you cast your PG and I cast my HG and we'll see who gets their bucktail in first..pink slips for boats? give it up buddy you're not really making any sense... many guys have gone from the PG to an HG and once they do, they all realize they were missing out using their pgs...yes, it is easier, but easier in this comparison, does mean slower.

Edited by BNelson 8/25/2017 3:36 PM
T3clay
Posted 8/25/2017 3:38 PM (#875539 - in reply to #875530)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 770


Here ya go


Zoom - | Zoom 100% | Zoom + | Expand / Contract | Open New window
Click to expand / contract the width of this image
(15036934444880.jpg)



Attachments
----------------
Attachments 15036934444880.jpg (45KB - 308 downloads)
happy hooker
Posted 8/25/2017 3:44 PM (#875540 - in reply to #875539)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 3136


Winner-Copo Camaro,,Challenger Buckshot,,Mustang Shelby GT ,,,or Volkswagen Jetta convertible "but" wearing a buff!
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 3:50 PM (#875541 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


Bnelson your completely missing it. I would put my house on it if you had a HG with a spinner on it and cranked as fast as you could it would be the same time as if you did the same with a PG with same bait and same cast length.

This isn't a me vs you. We exert different amount of force. We are talking the same force. What you are saying if if force is the same acting on the same object speed would be different. That is not correct
waldo
Posted 8/25/2017 3:53 PM (#875542 - in reply to #875540)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 224


Location: Madison
First money, then boats, now a house. Only one way to settle this guys.

As someone who has thrown both reels extensively, I have $100 on Brad.
Abu7000
Posted 8/25/2017 3:56 PM (#875543 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 217


I am a sixty-six fat old man who throws double tens four or five times a week. I believe throwing an HG with the Trinidad handle requires no more effort than throwing a PG with the stock handle. Using the same effort, the double ten moves faster with the HG. In addition, when adding extra effort the HG speed is much greater than any speed possible with a PG. I did not want to believe this. I was convinced that an Abu 7000 or the PG would do the same thing as the HG, but that is not true.
One can crank and get adequate speed out of a PG, but it does not compare to the speed of an HG. For me, this is a discussion about all day fishing more than physics. In my opinion, one cannot equal or maintain the speed of a PG fitted with a Trinidad handle with an HG. A Trinidad may help a PG but it cannot equal an HG.a
T3clay
Posted 8/25/2017 4:35 PM (#875546 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 770


Anzo are you saying that x amount of force applied to any reel will equal the same speed because the gear ratio equals it out?
anzomcik
Posted 8/25/2017 4:39 PM (#875547 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


If you apply the same force to differ reels the result would be the Same velocity of the bait. Keeping in mind the rpm of the spools would be different due to gear ratio and spoil dia. But the mph of the bait would be the same

Edited by anzomcik 8/25/2017 4:41 PM
T3clay
Posted 8/25/2017 4:51 PM (#875549 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 770


So would you say that if you pulled double tens at the same speed with different reels the same force would be applied to each reel?

Edited by T3clay 8/25/2017 4:53 PM
FishFearMe
Posted 8/25/2017 5:02 PM (#875551 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: RE: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 43


I have a dumb (but serious) question. What does PG and HG stand for?
Lucky Craft Man
Posted 8/25/2017 5:02 PM (#875552 - in reply to #875549)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 242


T3clay - 8/25/2017 4:51 PM

So would you say that if you pulled double tens at the same speed with different reels the same force would be applied to each reel?


I would agree with this with the caveat that the revolutions of those reel handles would be different because the resultant forces would be different (i.e., the resisting force of a lower gear ratio reel would be less than that of a higher ratio reel, hence why a lower ratio reel handle would turn at a higher rpm under the same force put on a higher gear ratio reel).
Lucky Craft Man
Posted 8/25/2017 5:05 PM (#875553 - in reply to #875551)
Subject: RE: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 242


FishFearMe - 8/25/2017 5:02 PM

I have a dumb (but serious) question. What does PG and HG stand for?


Hmmm...good question. I always assumed PG was Power Gear and HG was High Gear, but I truly have no idea. I will have to Google search that for my own edification.
14ledo81
Posted 8/25/2017 6:11 PM (#875560 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 4269


Location: Ashland WI
What about handle length? That has to play a part in "force" exerted. With a longer handle, one could exert the same (or more) force and it would feel less.
ToddM
Posted 8/25/2017 6:22 PM (#875563 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 20181


Location: oswego, il
If you exert the same force while constipated as you do normally you will have time to enjoy this whole thread.
Barphbag
Posted 8/25/2017 6:42 PM (#875566 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 50


Location: Southern Indiana
What's the best reel for burning double flushers?
Lucky Craft Man
Posted 8/25/2017 7:35 PM (#875573 - in reply to #875560)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 242


14ledo81 - 8/25/2017 6:11 PM

What about handle length? That has to play a part in "force" exerted. With a longer handle, one could exert the same (or more) force and it would feel less.


Well, handle length provides you more moment arm, which will naturally apply more force. There are so many varibles to be considered that it is difficult to make absolute statements. For example, of you had two identical reels, but one is lubricated more completely (i.e., less friction), then that lubed reel with the same gear ratio will experience more rpm's than the unlubricate reel, because the coefficent of friction within the system is lower in the lubed reel. I can't speak for Anzo, but I am assuming he is making the assumption that all elements of the system are the same except gear ratio. I am also assuming he is considering that the DC10's reach their terminal velocity through hydrodynamic resistance and are not being pulled through a vaccum. With the resultant speed being capped and everything else in the system being the same except for gear ratio, then his argument is correct. Again, that is a theoretical argument and like you mentioned, there are so many other factors that differ (e.g., handle length, lubrication, hydrodynamic resistance of line used, muscle group in the arm being used to rotate the handle faster vs. powering through the resistance of the high gears, and on and on) that I think it is hard for people to conceptulize those factors being removed. And for the sake of this argument, personal experience, opinion, and perception are considered reality, so these discussions are as fruitful as the guys comment two above this post discussing his gastrointestinal issues. With that being said, these are still enjoyible threads to read.

Edited by Lucky Craft Man 8/25/2017 7:38 PM
bigbulls
Posted 8/25/2017 7:50 PM (#875576 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: RE: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 13


Location: Billings, MT
A few thoughts here
-I'm really upset I had a busy day at work and had to wait until now to read this thread
-I want to be friends with ToddM. I need more of his humor in my life
-I won't waste a second to defend why, but reel choice IS an OBVIOUS FACTOR
-this meme sums it up nicely.



Attachments
----------------
Attachments image.jpeg (66KB - 338 downloads)
RLSea
Posted 8/25/2017 9:40 PM (#875589 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 483


Location: Northern Illinois
So to answer the OP: no.
nar160
Posted 8/25/2017 11:17 PM (#875593 - in reply to #875547)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 408


Location: MN
anzomcik - 8/25/2017 4:39 PM
If you apply the same force to differ reels the result would be the Same velocity of the bait. Keeping in mind the rpm of the spools would be different due to gear ratio and spoil dia. But the mph of the bait would be the same


The term you are looking for is not force - it is power. Power = work per unit time.

The velocity of the bait is related to the power being used to pull it. Work = force x displacement. Power = work / time = force * (displacement / time) = force * velocity. Force in this case is also a function of velocity.

Assuming no internal friction (not entirely true but irrelevant here), by conservation of energy the power being used to pull the bait is the power transferred to the handle motion by the user. So power is really the term you are getting at.

The power put into the handle motion is most simply expressed as 2pi x torque x RPM. Both torque and speed of revolution play a role. Also, torque is not equal to force. Torque = handle length x force, so handle length also plays a role.

IMO, the question is what is the limiting factor - is it torque/handle force, RPM, or what? If it really is true that your max speed is the same with the PG and HG, then apparently your limit on force (with HG) just happens to be the same as your limit on RPM (with PG). I can't imagine this is true for everyone. I certainly feel like I can reel a bait in faster with a high geared reel, even if it feels like more resistance. With a proper handle diameter, the force applied isn't really the limiting factor.
miket55
Posted 8/25/2017 11:41 PM (#875595 - in reply to #875466)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 1212


Location: E. Tenn
This is something I would have expected to see on the winternet..but I'm usually fishing then..

supertrollr
Posted 8/26/2017 3:25 AM (#875597 - in reply to #875488)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's


BNelson - 8/25/2017 11:18 AM

you're making it way more confusing than it is..
stand next to me with your PG, I will use an HG... we cast the same bait at the same time, mine will be to the boat faster with us both exerting the same force on the handle.... it's really that simple.

how this can't be true ?seriously how a 5.4:1 could be equal to a 8.1:1 in someone head? i don't get it...........
supertrollr
Posted 8/26/2017 3:27 AM (#875598 - in reply to #875563)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's


ToddM - 8/25/2017 6:22 PM

If you exert the same force while constipated as you do normally you will have time to enjoy this whole thread.
muhaaaa always the right phrase
upnortdave
Posted 8/26/2017 8:02 AM (#875607 - in reply to #875532)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 668


Location: mercer wi
I lIke jams and preserves better then jelly. Jams spread better and you don't get clumping and can cover the whole slice of bread. Also like creamy c peanut butter
ToddM
Posted 8/26/2017 8:32 AM (#875614 - in reply to #875607)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 20181


Location: oswego, il
upnortdave - 8/26/2017 8:02 AM

I lIke jams and preserves better then jelly. Jams spread better and you don't get clumping and can cover the whole slice of bread. Also like creamy c peanut butter


WTF, you just opened up pandora's box! Way to complicate this debate! At least we had one constant, force. Now force is a variable based on the bread, type of peanut butter and the jam or jelly. Chunks, no chunks, flimsy bread, creamy, not creamy. See what you did here!?!?!?!?
anzomcik
Posted 8/26/2017 8:55 AM (#875617 - in reply to #875597)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's





Posts: 530


supertrollr - 8/26/2017 4:25 AM

BNelson - 8/25/2017 11:18 AM

you're making it way more confusing than it is..
stand next to me with your PG, I will use an HG... we cast the same bait at the same time, mine will be to the boat faster with us both exerting the same force on the handle.... it's really that simple.

how this can't be true ?seriously how a 5.4:1 could be equal to a 8.1:1 in someone head? i don't get it...........


It's true because the same force is applied to both, the 5.4 would turn the handle 1.5 (roughly) times faster than the 8:1. In the quote what's limited is FORCE, not rpm. So with the same force the fast reel would be turned slower the slower reel turns faster.

If the example was you are limited to 20 rpm then the reel with more ipt would win, with that it would require more force to achieve 20rpm.
upnortdave
Posted 8/26/2017 8:55 AM (#875618 - in reply to #875614)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 668


Location: mercer wi
Muhaha Muhaha Muhaha
muskyroller
Posted 8/26/2017 10:12 AM (#875629 - in reply to #875607)
Subject: Re: MPH of double 10's




Posts: 1039


Location: North St. Paul, MN
upnortdave - 8/26/2017 8:02 AM

I lIke jams and preserves better then jelly. Jams spread better and you don't get clumping and can cover the whole slice of bread. Also like creamy c peanut butter



POST OF THE YEAR!!!!