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

Topic: How Much Weight to Use With a Shelton Fish Descender?  (Read 7263 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

no_oil_needed

  • Lingcod
  • *****
  • Location: Lake Washington
  • Date Registered: May 2013
  • Posts: 256
The weight of the fish is not really a good factor in determining how much weight you need to make the fish negatively buoyant. The volume of trapped air is the number you really need to worry about. "A pints a pound the world around" means a pint of water weighs about a pound (a little more for saltwater). That means for every pint of air that fish has trapped, add a pound and a quarter or so to the descender. Pint = 1.25 pounds, quart = 2.5 pounds, half gallon= 5 pounds and so on. If you can't imagine how much a pint looks like, imagine how many tall boy beer cans the fish had to swallow to get that big. If you catch a fish that can hold a half gallon of air when reeled up from 60 feet, take a picture first because that's a big one.
Relax. You'll live longer.


Tinker

  • Sturgeon
  • *******
  • Kevin
  • Location: 42.74°N 124.5°W
  • Date Registered: May 2013
  • Posts: 3338
I've had a large yelloweye float 3 pounds before, so carry more than that!

I guess it's time to buy a pyramid anchor in case I get into one of those giants we enjoy down here along the South Coast.  The weights shown in the brochures from Oregon, Washington and Alaska look much smaller than three pounds.

Maybe I can just point at my SLA battery and say, "See that? That's my descender weight."

The weight of the fish is not really a good factor in determining how much weight you need to make the fish negatively buoyant. The volume of trapped air is the number you really need to worry about. "A pints a pound the world around" means a pint of water weighs about a pound (a little more for saltwater). That means for every pint of air that fish has trapped, add a pound and a quarter or so to the descender. Pint = 1.25 pounds, quart = 2.5 pounds, half gallon= 5 pounds and so on. If you can't imagine how much a pint looks like, imagine how many tall boy beer cans the fish had to swallow to get that big. If you catch a fish that can hold a half gallon of air when reeled up from 60 feet, take a picture first because that's a big one.

Oh my sweet and fluffy Lord!  I think I'm better off staying on the beach, sipping beer after beer.  That's a better use for pints and tallboys.  But it is a formula for how much weight one might need to carry.

Thank you, gentlemen.
The fish bite twice a day - just before we get here and right after we leave.


Mojo Jojo

  • Sturgeon
  • *******
  • Suffers from Yakfishiolus Catchyitis
  • Location: Tillamook, Oregon
  • Date Registered: May 2014
  • Posts: 6074
I've had a large yelloweye float 3 pounds before, so carry more than that!

I guess it's time to buy a pyramid anchor in case I get into one of those giants we enjoy down here along the South Coast.  The weights shown in the brochures from Oregon, Washington and Alaska look much smaller than three pounds.

Maybe I can just point at my SLA battery and say, "See that? That's my descender weight."

The weight of the fish is not really a good factor in determining how much weight you need to make the fish negatively buoyant. The volume of trapped air is the number you really need to worry about. "A pints a pound the world around" means a pint of water weighs about a pound (a little more for saltwater). That means for every pint of air that fish has trapped, add a pound and a quarter or so to the descender. Pint = 1.25 pounds, quart = 2.5 pounds, half gallon= 5 pounds and so on. If you can't imagine how much a pint looks like, imagine how many tall boy beer cans the fish had to swallow to get that big. If you catch a fish that can hold a half gallon of air when reeled up from 60 feet, take a picture first because that's a big one.

Oh my sweet and fluffy Lord!  I think I'm better off staying on the beach, sipping beer after beer.  That's a better use for pints and tallboys.  But it is a formula for how much weight one might need to carry.

Thank you, gentlemen.
I gotta 454 engine block that is not salvageable if you need more weight!



Shannon
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polepole

  • Administrator
  • Sturgeon
  • *****
  • NorthWest Kayak Anglers
  • Location: San Jose, CA :(
  • Date Registered: Apr 2006
  • Posts: 10099
I've had a large yelloweye float 3 pounds before, so carry more than that!

I guess it's time to buy a pyramid anchor in case I get into one of those giants we enjoy down here along the South Coast.  The weights shown in the brochures from Oregon, Washington and Alaska look much smaller than three pounds.

Maybe I can just point at my SLA battery and say, "See that? That's my descender weight."

I clipped on a couple of 8 ounce jigs, and at 4 pounds total weight, she went down slowly.

-Allen


Tinker

  • Sturgeon
  • *******
  • Kevin
  • Location: 42.74°N 124.5°W
  • Date Registered: May 2013
  • Posts: 3338
I gotta 454 engine block that is not salvageable if you need more weight!

I'm taking you off the list of the gentlemen I am thanking.
The fish bite twice a day - just before we get here and right after we leave.


Tinker

  • Sturgeon
  • *******
  • Kevin
  • Location: 42.74°N 124.5°W
  • Date Registered: May 2013
  • Posts: 3338
I clipped on a couple of 8 ounce jigs, and at 4 pounds total weight, she went down slowly.

Thank you, Allen.
The fish bite twice a day - just before we get here and right after we leave.