Leland on the Airflo Skagit Compact Fly Line
When rivers run high, green and cold, and the few
hulking winter fish in the system
won’t move more than four inches off the bottom to take a fly,
the only choice for dedicated two handed anglers is a Skagit head like the Airflo Skagit Compact fly line. In these conditions, anglers have to get big, heavy flies down to the stones, and put them in front of hunkered, slow-moving fish if they’re going to have a chance at success. For its part,
the Airflo Skagit Compact fly line will turn over exorbitant lengths of T-14 and the heaviest flies Northwestern vices have to offer, and it casts well even in beginners’ hands.
Leland on Specifications
Also known as Compact Skagit spey heads or shooting heads, the Airflo Skagit Compact fly line is
the only choice when turnover ability is paramount and casting room is as tight as it gets. With its short length – between 23’ and 27’, depending on grain rating – the Skagit Compact shooting head
builds compact D-loops, and with its minimal taper and high diameter tip, it will
turn over the tips and flies that are necessary to fish churning, green winter water. With bomb-proof welded loops at either end, and Airflo’s all-polyurethane construction, this line will perform season after season.
Specifications:
- Fly Line Density: Floating
- Fly Line Taper: Short powerful head, single taper
- Total Head Length: 23-27 feet (depends on grain weight)
- Running Line Length: running line sold separately
- Total Line Length: 23-27 feet
- Core: Low stretch ‘Power Core’
- Coating: Polyfuse XT cold weather Polyurethane
- Line Weights: 360 grains (4/5wt) to 720 grains (10/11wt)
- Color: ‘Mint green’ chartreuse
Leland on Airflo Fly Lines
Airflo is a stand-out among fly line manufacturers in several ways, but one of their defining characteristics is their use of polyurethane (PU) instead of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) to build their fly lines. As plenty of people know, PVC is non-recyclable, and its manufacture entails a less-than-friendly solvent process with controversial environmental upshots. PU, on the other hand, is easily recycled, lasts longer in UV environments, and doesn’t require plasticizers to stay supple over the years. Airflo is so confident in their PU fly line technology that they offer a 5-year No-Crack Warranty.
What’s more, Airflo fly lines are built on incredibly low-stretch cores – 6% or less. For strike detection and hook setting,
this low stretch is essential – ask any experienced tarpon angler. But
one of the less understood merits of a low-stretch core like Airflo’s
multifilament Power Core has to do with casting. If a line stretches less, it offers better energy transfer and enhanced loop stability, especially at distance. For those who haven’t spent any time around casting tournaments, it might be hard to believe, but low stretch fly lines like those from Airflo are less prone to ‘jumping’ and are invariably more accurate. Power Cores are also supple over a much wider temperature range than monofilament, making line management easier in a host of fishing situations.
Leland on Airflo
With a huge following in their native UK and across Europe, Airflo is undoubtedly one of the preeminent names in fly line manufacturing.
Since their start in the late 1980s under UK angler Paul Burgess – when
they defined themselves through a move away from the traditional
solvent-based PVC fly line technology of the day – Airflo has stayed at
the forefront of fly line design and development, with a slew of patents to show their industry leadership. Airflo was the first firm to develop density compensation (DC) and the welded loop, which are now industry standards.
One of the largest selling points about Airflo lines is their
longevity, which has its source in the material used in manufacture:
polyurethane (PU). Like other urethanes, which are used in car
dashboards, boat paints, and car paints, PU is highly resistant to UV and chemical damage, and won’t leak solvents over time to crack as other fly lines can.
Integral to the long-lasting performance of Airflo lines is Airflo’s two-layer extrusion method, called Polyfuse XT. Utilizing a specialized extruder which is like a ‘nozzle inside a nozzle’, Airflo can seal two separate layers of polyurethane around a fly line core, and adjust the ratios of each material as the core passes out the extruder. The middle layer contains the defining elements of the line (whether microballoons, for flotation, or metal dust, for sinking ability) while the outer layer seals the line and contains all the slick-shooting properties that should be concentrated on the exterior. As a result, Airflo lines are less porous and consistently last longer.
Whether you’ve been fishing Airflo for years, or have just started to catch wind of their virtues, you should know that Airflo fly lines are hugely impressive, and Leland is thrilled to have the opportunity to carry them.
Airflo on the Skagit Compact Fly Line
Skagit heads were
originally developed by steelhead fishermen of the
Pacific Northwest to solve a problem that plagued "standard spey"
lines. Standard spey lines generally had tip diameters designed to fish
flies of modest size near the surface of the river. Fishermen on the
Skagit River in Washington State wanted
to fish heavier flies and get
them down to the level of the fish.
With the help of Tom Larimer,
Airflo developed a series of Compact Skagit heads designed to throw big
flies and sink tips in tight confined spaces. As a guide, Tom was able
to work on the Skagit Compact heads in the field by having his guests
fish them and making changes where necessary.
It is important to
note that the shorter a head is, the more critical its weight becomes.
By offering twelve models, ranging from a 23 foot 360 grain head to a
27 foot 720 grain head Airflo has ensured there is a Skagit Compact
head that perfectly balances with any rod and casting style. With the
incredible stresses put on each end of a Skagit head it is critical to
have a loop that will hold up. All Airflo two hand lines come with the
toughest, heavy duty, color coded loop system in the industry. Just
loop your favorite running line and sink tip to the Skagit Compact and
your are good to go.
Airflo on Polyfuse XT
All Polyfuse XT fly lines are produced using a unique dual coating process that
fuses a super slick, tough outer coating to an extremely supple polymer base that, unlike PVC, will not crack. They come with a 28 day satisfaction guarantee plus a five year non-crack guarantee.
Airflo on Airflo Fly Lines
Only Airflo lines are made from UV resistant super tough polyurethane.
There are no liquids used in the manufacture of Airflo lines and
therefore they last longer than PVC lines. With dry lubricant in the
outer coating, Airflo lines stay cleaner than other lines and don’t require as much care as PVC lines.
Use an Airflo Turbo Shoot cleaner or other thin non-sticky cleaner/protector
like STP Son of a Gun. By cleaning your line you help the front of the
line float and keep friction in the guides from degrading line
smoothness. You can use any brand fly line cleaner or conditioner on any Airflo fly line. Airflo lines are hardly affected by DEET
and other chemicals that would normally ruin a fly line. You don’t have
to worry about getting insect repellant on Airflo fly lines.
Airflo on Airflo
Not happy with the PVC fly line technology of the day, Paul Burgess, a mad keen flyfisher,
who also happened to be a qualified engineer, set about changing the
process by which modern fly lines are manufactured. Moving away from
the traditional tower system, Paul began extruding fly lines with computer controlled systems that allowed for control over production accuracy previously thought impossible.
That was the late 80s. Now, over 20 years later, Airflo is the world's leading manufacturer of solvent free fly lines
and is responsible for developing a series of innovations unparalleled
by any other line manufacturer during that period. Whilst we may not
have invented the fly line, innovation has been a keystone at every stage in our development, being the originators of Polyurethane coatings, creating the first welded loops, developing low stretch cores and even the world's first density compensated fly lines.
More recently, we've developed an advanced range of fly lines with Ridged coatings that reduce surface friction and improve shootability - each breakthrough offering a truly tangible improvement, not some invisible technology developed in the minds of the marketers.
'Green' or 'Environmentally Friendly' is something all fishing
companies like to claim, and whilst we are more than happy to make you
aware that our coatings are kinder to the environment, it was
originally the search for a polymer that didn't leach solvents, was unaffected by UV and ultimately just lasted longer that lead us to pursue polyurethane as an alternative to solvent based PVC.
The final result is what we believe to be the world's most advanced range of fly lines and, judging by the bandwagon we've created with our continuous stream of innovation, most of our competitors would seem to agree.