Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
May 04, 2025, 03:48:23 PM

Login with username, password and session length

Recent Topics

[May 03, 2025, 06:39:16 PM]

[May 03, 2025, 05:50:52 PM]

by jed
[May 02, 2025, 09:57:11 AM]

[May 01, 2025, 05:53:19 PM]

[April 26, 2025, 04:27:54 PM]

[April 23, 2025, 11:10:07 AM]

by [WR]
[April 23, 2025, 09:15:13 AM]

[April 21, 2025, 10:44:08 AM]

[April 17, 2025, 04:48:17 PM]

[April 17, 2025, 08:45:02 AM]

by jed
[April 11, 2025, 01:03:22 PM]

[April 11, 2025, 06:19:31 AM]

[April 07, 2025, 07:03:34 AM]

[April 05, 2025, 08:50:20 PM]

[March 31, 2025, 06:17:42 PM]

Picture Of The Month



Guess who's back?
jed with a spring Big Mack

Topic: Good bye Duo Locks! Hello Tactical Angler’s Power Clips.  (Read 3485 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

kardinal_84

  • Sturgeon
  • *******
  • Perseverance Pays!
  • Kayak Fishing Southcentral Alaska
  • Location: Anchorage, AK
  • Date Registered: Mar 2011
  • Posts: 4216
Copied over from my blogs...the relief is hard to imagine.  You'd think I would have addressed this problem years ago...

Copied from: https://guidesak.blogspot.com


In my reports and blog I try to be accurate and mention the bad days along with the good days.  One thing that even I couldn’t get myself to do was to report on some stupid errors I have made along the way.  Sure missed harpoon strikes and unbuttoned fish...it happens to everyone and I report those.  But stupid gear errors..or so I thought...was something I was too embarrassed about.

 Rewind 30 years to my Kenai River king salmon days.  If you looked up and down the river, I would say 95% of the lines utilized duo lock clips.  You know those bent steel wire snap clips that you always look at and wonder “Do these things really hold?”  But after hundreds of kings including a 71 pound king on anchor using braid, the duo lock snaps delivered the fish.  I never had problems with them until I started kayak fishing. 


 For the past three years, I have lost at least a half dozen fish due to failed duo lock snaps.  My most important fish was a 50 pound halibut that would have certainly won the inaugural NorthwestKayakAnglers.com kayak fishing tournament here in Alaska. I was fortunate enough to land a winning king later, but it could have cost me the tournament.

 So why could I use the duo lock snaps for 30 years without issue and all of the sudden they are costing me fish?  At first I thought I was going senile and simply not locking down the snaps.  I got into the habit of checking every snap every few bait checks.  A few times I found them snap open.  Hmmm...I AM going nuts.  But it was odd.  A few times I know I checked them an hour prior and they were closed.  Double hmmm….

 What I have come to realize is that the duo locks are fairly strong and they rarely just pop open.  What is happening is that unlike on a powerboat, the duo lock snaps comes into contact with all sorts of things.  The hull of the kayak, the rod holder, the fish finder, etc.  I believe it is then when the slightest pressure in the wrong direction on the wire pops them open. 

 This is especially prone to happen at netting.  Unlike a powerboat where you are netting down to the fish and the snaps are typically well above the fish, on a kayak the snaps are typically very close in line to the fish.  This means they can also be hit by the rim of the net much more frequently or get caught in the netting.  This is when the snaps are coming undone. 

 Last month I lost a nice king salmon and 20 dollars worth of gear when a duo lock came undone.  ARGH!  OK ENOUGH!  On our recent trip to Kodiak, Chris Mautino of Liquid Adventures suggested I try the Power Clips from tactical anglers. 

 They look very solid.  They should hold as well or better than any corkscrew swivel...which seem nearly impossible to find in anything but the gigantic sizes in most sporting good stores 

 My only complaint might be they are too small for their strength rating!!  I suppose I shouldn’t complain about that.  I bought the 50lbs, 75lbs, and 125lbs test snaps.  I should have bought the one size larger. 

 The duo locks won’t completely be banished from my tackle boxes.  Some of the larger flashers need them to properly connect though there are other options.  But if I do use them, I am going to bend the ends over or secure them some other way. 

 But for the quick lure and equipment change overs, I am going to swear away from the duo lock snaps.  I will report on the usage but given Chris Mautino’s glowing endorsement the reviews I have found online, it’s going to work amazingly well!

 The post isn’t about a glowing review of the Tactical Angler Power Clips since I haven’t tried them!  But finding an option that eliminates a major problem I have been having over the past several years and getting the monkey off my back with a full admission...HALLELUJA!!!!  That’s worth a post!

 BYE BYE DUO LOCKS!!!!!!







Personal Chauffeur for Kokatat & Hobie Fishing Team member, Ryu .

Personal fishing sites of Alaska Kayak Angling adventures of my son and I. I am NOT a guide.
guidesak.blogspot.com
AlaskaKayakFisher.com


tambs

  • Rockfish
  • ****
  • Location: Tri-Cities, WA
  • Date Registered: Aug 2014
  • Posts: 145
I've never used those tactical clips, but like you, I've had a few problems with the duo locks.  I use mostly McMahon scissor snaps now for just about everything.  Never had one come unbuttoned.


ndogg

  • ORC
  • Sturgeon
  • *
  • "Fists of Fury"
  • Location: SW Portland
  • Date Registered: Sep 2009
  • Posts: 1767
I have been using something similar but without the pointed ends for several years.  I started using them because they are smaller then a comparable sized dual lock and tend to snag less debris.   For most fishing applications they work great, but I have noticed a few shortcomings, they are hard to attach to lures with large wire or partially shrouded connection points, I have lost a few lures when casting, and acrobatic fish can pop the lure off.  The last 2 shortcomings I think were partially caused in not checking to make sure that nothing has slipped when rapidly casting.  My biggest problem with paper clip style clips is that they are hard to find in the NW. 
 


yaktastic

  • A cowboy in a kayak? I never was normal.
  • Salmon
  • ******
  • shut up and let me fish.
  • Location: The Dalles Or
  • Date Registered: Feb 2013
  • Posts: 857
I have never lost a fish to them but I have had them come undone with good size trout on.not much but now that you bring it up all have been from a kayak.probably operator error is to blame also.
4th place 2017 TBKD Rockfish.


C.Salp

  • Herring
  • **
  • Location: Olympic Peninsula
  • Date Registered: Dec 2010
  • Posts: 27
 :thumbsup:
I have been using Tactical Anglers clips for a few years, and highly recommend them.

I still use a few duolock and coastlock snaps (that I had already owned before initially trying the Tactical Anglers clips) from time to time,
but I have been using/phasing in the Tactical Anglers clips in more and more fishing applications.

Crazy Alberto, the proprietor of Tactical Anglers, is a top-notch angler (likely the most versatile angler I have ever met), as well as a true gentleman.

CS