Awesome Fishing Knots tests strength of fishing knots. Every fishing knot has video tutorial, demonstration, practical use instructions videos from the best "How to Fish" YouTube fishing channel in the world.
Learn how to tie 5 best knots for hooks in 5 minutes. This quick step-by-step fishing tutorial shows you the strongest and most reliable hook-tying knots for both beginners and experienced anglers. Perfect for mono, fluoro and braid. Improve your rig strength and land more fish with these essentials fishing knots.
Watch the full video on YouTube for detailed instructions.
Keywords: fishing knots, snell knot tutorial, how to snell a hook, fishing tips, beginner fishing, strongest fishing knot, hook tying, fishing rig setup, fishing hacks, fishing tutorial, fishing tips for beginners, palomar knot, clinch knot, improved clinch knot, uni knot, snell knot, trilene knot
There are many ways how you can attach fishing line to
fishing reel.
This fishing knot is beginner friendly and one that every
fisherman should know.
It's very important to know that this knot is not super
strong and unbreakable, it is opposite this knot is the one that will save your
fishing equipment.
This video belongs to youtube fishing knot channel How to Fish
The Arbor Knot is essentially the seatbelt for your fishing line. While most knots are
about catching the fish, this one is entirely about protecting your gear and
ensuring your line actually stays attached to the reel.
Think of it as the foundational anchor. Without a proper
arbor knot, your entire day on the water could end in a ghost reel situation where the line spins but the spool
stays still.
Why It’s a Lifesaver
for Your Reel
1. Prevents Line Slippage
Modern fishing reels especially those using braided line are
very smooth. Braided line is essentially slippery plastic. If you don't use an
arbor knot (which cinches tighter as tension is applied), the entire block of line can spin around the spool like a loose
wedding ring on a finger.
The Result: You try
to reel in, but the line doesn't move. The arbor knot creates the initial
friction needed to grip the metal.
2. The Last Stand Protection
If you hook into a massive fish that runs (pulls out all your line), you will eventually
hit the end of your spool.
The Save: A weak knot
will snap or untie, and you’ll lose your fish and $30 worth of line.
The Arbor Knot: It’s
designed to be a jam knot. The more the fish pulls, the tighter the
overhand knot jams against the main loop, giving you one last chance to stop
the fish before everything is gone.
3. Even Line Lay
A bulky, messy knot at the start creates a bump on
the spool. As you wind more line over that bump, it creates an uneven surface.
The Save: The arbor
knot is low profile. It keeps the core of the spool level, which prevents
tangles and wind knots later when you're casting.
How to Tie Arbor Knot (The 3 Step
Logic)
You don't need a PhD in seamanship for this one. It’s just
two simple overhand knots:
1. The Loop: Wrap your line around the reel spool and tie a
standard overhand knot around the standing
(main) part of the line. This creates a
sliding loop.
2. The Stopper: Tie a second overhand knot at the very end
of the tail (the tag end).
3. The Cinch: Pull the main line. The loop will slide down
and tighten against the spool, and the stopper
knot will jam against the first knot,
locking it in place.
Pro Tip: If you are using Braided Line, the arbor knot might
still slip because braid is so slick. Most anglers put a small piece of
electrical tape over the knot or back the reel with a few yards of monofilament
first.
A Snell Knot is a widely used fishing knot and dates from the old times when hooks didn't have the eye. Today there are less and less hooks on the market without the eye. The Snell Knot is definitely one of the best and most popular.
This knot gets more fish hooked when used with the circle hook than any other fishing knots by 20%, but I would take this information with reserve because the information that I found is not completely descriptive like which knot is compared, what was the fishing line used, what type of fishing, what fish.....
Some advantages of a Snell Knot are:
*You can Snell any hook, even the hook without an eye
*The knot is fixed to the fishing hook shank and it is impossible for the hook to move on the line
*Strength is on the highest level
*Fun for kids to learn
Disadvantages of a Snell Knot are:
*It takes about 30 seconds, depends on proficiency, but at least double the time than some other knots
*Tying small hooks can be really challenging. It is necessary to have good coordination and high precision
*Easy to fail tying, one out of ten, even for someone who did it thousands of times
We all love fishing and fishing knots are a part of our life so it's better that we know them better for our chances to catch our dream fish. There are many different types of knots that we can use for fishing, many of them are good, but usually we use just a couple that we can remember. Lots of fishing knots have their purpose, why they exist and why someone created them, went is the right time to use them and what fishing line should be used.
It's the same as when you go fishing, and it's never the same, you never catch the same fish, but if you change to a spot just a 50 meters away, the fish species that you should target and try to catch are completely different. That means you need different bait, rod, line, hooks and even knots. That's why we here will try to assist you in finding the best fishing knot for the right occasion.
If you are using eyeless hooks, the Clinch Knot and Improved Clinch Knot are not the ones you should use.
How to tie a Clinch Knot ?
Step 1.
Get the line thru the hook for about 10cm or 5inch. Look at picture 1.
Step 2. Hold with thumb and index finger the main fishing line tag end, with the other hand hold the fishing hook then start twisting the hook 6 times if the line is less than 30pounds or around 15kg, if your line is over 15kg or 30 pounds twist only 4 times because it's more than enough. If you twist more then necessary you will damage the line with lots of friction or it will be unevenly tied and easy to untie.
Step 3. Push the Tag end inside the loop under the hook eye, look at the orange coloured line in my picture ( I know I'm not talented for drawing :) ).
Step 4. Very important step with all knots, before finishing the knot, you need to lubricate it to reduce friction and damaging the fishing line. You can lubricate with water or saliva it doesn't really make a big difference. After you finish all of these steps, you should get a knot like this one below.
Step 5. Cut the end tag close to the knot, but not too close to prevent untying.
Step 6. There is one more optional step that you can use with all knots at the end. Some old man taught me when I was a kid that I should use a lighter to burn the tag end so fish can't poke on the sharp tag end which could be negative for the fishes interest for the bait. I think there is one more good reason that you should burn the tag end and that is that the burned end becomes thicker and is much. much harder to slip over even when the fishing knot is tied properly. Why not, if you have time one more secure measure can just help in extreme situations maybe with your biggest fish.
Step 7. If you still have some hesitations on how to tie a fishing knot? I recommend the Youtube channel How to Fish - Fishing tutorials.
Clinch Knot video tutorial you can watch down here:
The Dropper loop is a type of loop knot
which is often used on multi-hook fishing lines. It can be created in
the middle of a long line and forms a loop which is off to the side of
the line.
You can tie Dropper Loop fishing knot in lots of rigs ex. add hook to trout rig or add more hooks to deep sea fishing or tie your jig for bass fishing... If you are creative you will find lots of different ways to tie this loop to your fishing line.
Albright Knot is one of top 10 fishing knots every fisherman should know.
This not is used worldwide from north freshwater salmon fisherman in Alaska to southern saltwater, open ocean fishing in Australia. Now you probably think what is the reason and why is this knot special? If you think like that you're close to answer because it it special and it is also known as Albright Special!
Advantages:
*You can join any two fishing lines together, this means tippet 10 lb to main line 50lb, mono to braided line or fluorcarbon, or any other combination.
*This knot is suitable for freshwater and saltwater fishing.
*Time to learn 45min
Disadvantages:
*Moderate skills are necessary to tie this knot
The Surgeon's Big Game Fishing Knot is a knot to join or tie a braided line to mono or braided to
leader or fluorocarbon. In this tutorial you will learn how to easily tie a braid to leader fishing knot.
The first time I saw this knot, I was a kid and one old man told me this is a braid to braid knot and 15 years later I went on fishing charters and they told us that it is a braid to leader knot. This is some kind of variant of the Surgeon's knot because it has more wraps than an ordinary Surgeon's knot.
This fishing knot is strong and quick to tie. It is very reliable and I'm sure you're going to use it after watching this video.
Advantages of Surgeon's Fishing Knot are:
* You can tie it easier than other knots especially in low light or adverse conditions
* You can join 2 different fishing lines with different diameters and characteristics.
Examples:( braid to braid, mono to braid, fluorocarbon to mono, mono to mono etc...)
* Stronger knot than any other (near 100%) - used in big game fishing
The San Diego Jam Knot is one of the essential fishing knots because it's very reliable and it's strength beats the Palomar knot.
This knot is often mixed with the Uni knot but they are completely different because they are wrapping 2 lines but going in different directions. We can say it's some kind of reversal of the Improved Clinch knot, but much stronger and that's the reason of it's use in big game fishing. If you want to catch Tuna this is the knot you can use for tying heavy lures.
The number of times you need to wrap your line depends on your fishing line and you will quickly find out after tying a couple of times. Usually wrap 4-8 times, 4 times for 50+lb line and 8 times for less then 10lb fishing line.
When tightening the knot don't forget to lubricate as you do with every other fishing knot and try to keep the line spiral from overlapping otherwise the knot will cut itself and you will maybe lose a once in a lifetime perfect catch.
Pros:
*Used for fishing hooks, swivels, lures...
*Lure can swing thru the knot
*Strong 94% breaking strain
*Fishing lines mono,braid and fluoro
*Medium skills required
*Fast learning
Cons
*Double time to tie than Palomar Knot with similar strength
*It needs practice, not for beginners
What is the strongest fishing knot? A question that probably every one of us who likes fishing sometimes ask themselves.
This is the second test of fishing knots breaking strength comparison with the Snell vs Palomar knot.
If you missed the first test between the Clinch and Improved Clinch knot, you can find it here First test Clinch vs Improved Clinch knot.
We used the same rules and same equipment like in test one and you can find out in the link below.
The results fishing knots strength chart:
As we can see in the graph and table, in the conditions and equipment that we used for testing in those two tests Palomar knot was the strongest fishing knot. Second place is Snell knot and third place is the Improved Clinch knot.
The results fishing knots strength table:
(Snell vs Palomar knot)
If you want to see the testing video click here:
Any questions, tips and ideas are more than welcome.
Please share with your friends.
How many times has it happened to you guys that you snag and brake your
fishing line and you want to tie a new hook to as fast as
possible to continue fishing because every second that you're out fishing and you are not
fishing is a huge loss! You are rushing to tie a fishing hook to a line and
your hands are dirty, no luck. The weather is changing and you are
trying to setup your fishing rig. You are tying your swivel and you made a
Clinch knot but you don't have a long enough tag end to make one more tuck
at the loop and it comes to mind that it's the same thing it's going to
hold enough with or without the extra tuck. Is it worth it to untie and tie again? We are going to find out the answer very soon.
In this article
we will see fishing knots strength comparison,chart and table of two fishing knots, Clinch knot and Improved Clinch knot.
We will compare them to see which one is better and is the Improved really more reliable than the ordinary Clinch knot.
In this testing we want to avoid any possible human influence in the test, so that means we will use standardized knots. All fishing lines are cut before tying fishing knots, every single one of them will be the same length and it will be tied the same way which means the same number of loops.
Equipment we use in this test:
*Mustad Hooks Big Red 1/0
*Monofilament 10lb 4.6kg Dia .30mm
*Portable Electronic Fishing Scale
Fishing video with our test on the Clinch and Improved clinch fishing knot.
Here are the results of the tests. The results are a little bit shocking for me and I expected much better results from both, at least 20%.
Clinch knot broke three times at 2.575 kg , 2.410 kg and 2.185 kg which gives an average breaking point of 2.390kg which is only 52% of the full line capacity!
Improved Clinch knot broke three times at 2.825 kg, 4.080 kg and 3.735 kg which gives us an average breaking point of 3.547 kg which is 77% of capacity of the fishing line.
Final word and conclusions
3.547/2.390=1.48
The Improved Clinch knot is stronger 48% which is amazing to know. The Clinch knot has a problem with slipping when it's exposed to high tension and your tag end is gone in seconds.
So don't be lazy when you tie your swivel, hook or lure, do one more step: tuck the line through the last loop. If you don't have a long enough tag end, do it from the beginning. Remember what you read here and maybe you will hook your dream fish and you don't want to lose it because of a knot.