Orvis® Super Strong™ Nylon Tippet | Bass Pro Shops

Orvis® Super Strong™ Nylon Tippet

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  • Co-polymer resin material was developed exclusively for Orvis
  • Very supple for lifelike fly presentation
  • The highest strength (psi) of any nylon material tested
  • Nylon molecules are reinforced by a special resin system
  • Line retainer included on each spool
  • 30 meters

With Orvis' Super Strong Nylon Tippet, you can use lighter tippets to fool more fish without worrying about the tippet breaking. It has a greater ''knotted strength'' than any other nylon material, and a much greater knotted strength than that of fluorocarbon tippet materials. Super Strong ha [Read More]

   
Quantity

30 meters

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  • Co-polymer resin material was developed exclusively for Orvis
  • Very supple for lifelike fly presentation
  • The highest strength (psi) of any nylon material tested
  • Nylon molecules are reinforced by a special resin system
  • Line retainer included on each spool
  • 30 meters

With Orvis' Super Strong Nylon Tippet, you can use lighter tippets to fool more fish without worrying about the tippet breaking. It has a greater ''knotted strength'' than any other nylon material, and a much greater knotted strength than that of fluorocarbon tippet materials. Super Strong has the highest strength (psi) of any nylon material tested. Very supple for lifelike fly presentation, Super Strong is constructed of a co-polymer resin material that was developed exclusively for Orvis and is sold by no one else. 30 meters.

Size
Diameter
Average
Break Strength
8X
.003''
1.75 lb.
7X
0.004''
2.5 lb.
6X
0.005''
3.5 lb.
5X
0.006''
4.75 lb.
4X
0.007''
6 lb.
3X
0.008''
8.5 lb.
2X
0.009''
11.5 lb.
1X
0.010''
13.5 lb.
0X
0.011''
15.5 lb.
4 Questions | 7 Answers

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what is a tipprt

3 weeks, 4 days ago
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A: 
For fly fishing mostly. Tapered leaders cost approx $4 ea. so when about 3-4 ft of that gets broken off or used in tying on new flies, "tippet" material (pretty much just fishing line...) is tied on to the end. I won't get into specifics but if you are not fly fishing, tippets are nothing to worry about.
1 week, 1 day ago
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 - Winooski, VT
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Q: 
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does this sink?

Details: 
and how many lines do u need for fly fishing,i got 2 reels for it a 10ft rod and a 9' do i buy the backing plus the line then leader or what? please help me out cause i would luv to get into this!!
i would like my line to float or is sinking line better? want the fly to float on top of water,please let me know
Thank u for your help Rich
8 months ago
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A: 
It really depends on what you're doing. You should match your rod weight to your reel weight, then get the same weight fly line. Start off with some WF(weight forward) line, it's the easiest to cast and by far the most popular. Get a floating line, and depending on the kind of fishing you're doing, a 7-9 FT leader in a 3-5X. The higher the X the thinner the leader is. Make sure you get a tapered knotless leader, available in any fly shop. This tippet material is used to tie on to your leader when you've lost a few feet from switching flies. Hope this helps, good luck!
5 months ago
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 - Winooski, VT
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A: 
On one Fly Reel, there are normally 3 to 4 lines. Starting from the spool, and working out, you have, backing, flyline, leader, and Tippet. Alot of people I know go without the tippet. The backing is normally braided line, and the fly line is colored plastic line, and your leader is usually clear.

Your rods should have Weight listed on them, its a scale from 2 to 12, 2 being the lighest, and 12 being the heaviest. Your Fly line, Fly Reels, & Fly Rod all have to mach, or be within the suggested limits.

Dry or Wet flying is a personal preference. I have a buddy who a nymph lover through and through (Wet fly), but, personally I like dry flies, but, have been known to rig a Hopper/Dropper combo ( a dry fly, with a nymph behind it.).

Good luck Fishing!
8 months ago
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 - Winchester, VA
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I'm just fresh out of the box with a fly fishings outfit. How long should a tippet be?

I bought a Temple Fork NXT 5/6 9ft outfit.
11 months ago
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A: 
Depends on your leader length, and fishing situation. When I use it, I only use enough, to make up for any leader I may have cut off.
8 months ago
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 - Winchester, VA
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A: 
Since you admit to being new to flyfishing I wonder if you may be asking about leader length as well as tippet length. Most people use 7 1/2 ft to 9 ft tapered leaders for general fishing. The thick butt section attaches to your flyline. The tippet section of that leader is the thin end and as you replace flies it gets shorter from cutting. So at some point you would tie on an additional length of tippet rather than replace the whole leader. For a 7 1/2 ft leader the tippet would be about 18". On a 9 ft. it would be 20 -22" on average. Hope this helps.
10 months ago
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 - Illinois
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1 year, 11 months ago
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A: 
Break strength. For example, 4X may be 6 lb whereas 3X is 8 lb.

For leaders, it would be talking about the smallest diameter of the leader, the end where the flies are tied on.
1 week, 1 day ago
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 - Winooski, VT
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A: 
The "X" is a simplified reference to the diameter. For a tapered leader it applies to the tippet end. The actual break weight of the line at any given diameter is different based on the material (such as mono compared to flourocarbon) and by manufacturer. Generally speaking the higher the "x" number the thinner and likely more limp the line for smaller flies. The lower the number the thicker and usually stiffer the line to use for bulkier flies.
10 months ago
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 - Illinois
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