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[font "Calibri"][frown]Just started using my new downrigger and it seems to make a high singing noise. It is a Cannon EZ troll and I am using a 6# weight. I have been using it a 30 to 75 feet and usually troll at about 2.5 to 3 mph for trout. I guess I need to know if that is normal or not and if not what do I do to fix it so it won’t "sing".[/font]
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I GET THAT AS WELL. IT DONT SEEM TO BOTHER THE KOKES OR TROUT. ???
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It is normal. It bothers some people but if you will listen to the singing of the wire you will start to see a pattern. Different sounds mean that the wire and lure are clear and trolling correctly or the lure is fouled with moss or you have a fish on. It's a really great tool once you get used to it!
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That is normal. Also the faster you go, the more it sings. I usually troll at 1.7 - 2.1 mph for Kokes or trout and the singing is much better. Also trolling faster will make your cannon ball/lures rise higher in the water. The deeper you go, the worse it gets. If you have 65' of line out and trolling at 3 mph with a 6lb ball, I bet you are really only about 50' deep.
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I do what works. I have had 70+ fish days on Ririe at those speeds in June and July. I do slow down around 1.2 when the water is cooler.
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If you replace the wire cable with cord, the noise will go away. Cabela's sells it for $15-$30 depending on the length. Just do a search on their site for downrigger line.
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Some food for thought. Kokes have one of the lowest C&R survival rates in warm water of almost any fresh water fish we catch. You very rarely catch a Koke that has healed up hook wounds from being caught as an adult. 60 to 70 Koke days could have a mortality rate of over 50% even though the fish appears to swim off after release.
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[quote MMDon]Some food for thought. Kokes have one of the lowest C&R survival rates in warm water of almost any fresh water fish we catch. You very rarely catch a Koke that has healed up hook wounds from being caught as an adult. 60 to 70 Koke days could have a mortality rate of over 50% even though the fish appears to swim off after release.[/quote]
Some how I knew you would respond this way. [:|]
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The two captains who have the Salmon University web site and who teach fishing techniques year-round in the western Washington area feel that the singing cable attracts salmon. I have had salmon in the ocean hit my gear literally 1-2 feet away from the cable. I have had incredible fishing days when the cable is going crazy. I can't imagine swapping good cable out to try and eliminate the noise. Mike
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Depends on how irritating you find the noise, I guess.
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