Spring and Pawl Drag Fly Fishing Reels
The first type of drag system is the traditional Spring-and
Pawl-drag. Just because this drag type if traditional doesn't
mean it's outdated. In fact, spring-and-pawl fly reels are ideal
for trout fishing, particularly when using light tippets. When
line is pulled out of a quality spring-and-pawl fly reel, it is
pulled out very smoothly indeed. There is no "jerkiness" or
"unevenness" in the tension that is applied to the line. The
line instead leaves the reel at a very smooth rate, without any
variations in the amount of tension. By getting rid of the
unevenness in tension, the fly reel goes a long way towards
protecting the tippet.
Try to think about it this way. You have a large fish on line.
The fish starts pulling out fly line at a good rate. Then, the
tension on the line suddenly increases then slackens again. What
happens? If you're using a light tippet, you're fish is gone,
that's what. The sudden increase in tension in the rate the fly
line came out of the reel parted the tippet material. Its not
much different than giving a good jerk on the fly line when you
want to break the fly line because of being hooked on underwater
logs or rocks.
So, the moral of the story is this. A quality spring-and-pawl
drag system is excellent for most trout fishing situations,
particularly those where you will be fishing using light tackle
and tippets.
What's the drawback of a spring-and-pawl drag fly reel? They are
not designed for very large fish, like large bass, steelhead,
salmon or saltwater species. While they work, they don't work as
well as the newer disc-drag models discussed below.
Disc Drag Fly Fishing Reels
The second type of drag system is the newer disc-drag system.
This type of fly reel uses various materials that essentially
act like a brake on a car. A pad inside the fly reel is adjusted
up or downward (by the drag adjustment on the reel), which in
turn applies more or less tension to the fly line. Disc-drag fly
reels are all the rage in fly fishing. Even the cheapest of the
cheap fly reels tout their disc drag system.
Disc drag reels excel in large fish situations, like when
catching exceptionally large trout, large bass, steelhead,
salmon or saltwater species. The disc drag reel is designed to
exert a smooth but hard pressure on the fly line without seizing
up and is ideal when large fish that strip out hundreds of feet
of line are caught.
The drawback to a disc drag reel as far as fly fishing goes is
that in comparison to a quality spring-and-pawl reel, the
tension can be just a bit more uneven. This is not a problem in
most fishing situations that a normal trout fisherman will
encounter. However, if you are using 6x and 7x tippets and
fishing for wary trout, even the slightest hesitation or change
in tension pressure can cause a tippet to part ways with the
trout.
Now that you know more about the drag system on fly reels, it is
now time to turn our attention to the quality of the fly reel.