You're a life saver, I just bought a Swimbait underground DRT Klash 9 and needed to learn this knot at some point because I would hate to lose a $140 glidebait, most channels are way too fast or not detailed enough when it comes to the fine details.
@@loganjohnson9073 thank you - I’m glad I could help! Nobody wants to lose a 100+$ lure 💯 If you’re tying directly to fluoro, I would suggest the double San Diego jam knot. It’s a little stronger with fluoro and in my opinion, easier to tie with fluoro as well. I have a tutorial for the double SDJ on my playlist 👍
The uni knot is what I use for swivels and hooks; sometimes I like to use the snail knot for my 1/0 circle hook when I’m jigging with a slip bobber; I will definitely use the double uni knot for my swivels from now on. I really like the snail knot also! I usually use 10 wraps on it. It’s not only strong, but it also holds the hook in a good position, especially when using a live night crawler, and I’ve lost less hooks using this as well!
double uni is a great choice for a swivel, especially for a braid to swivel connection. I'm a huge fan of the snell as well - I always use the snell for octopus hooks 👍
I have tied the Uni Knot for over 40 years saw someone test this knot on another channel with 65 lb. Mono he had heavy leather gloves couldn’t break it almost cut thru his gloves.I have been using it since for anything over 8 lb test. The Double Pitzen knot is equally as strong.
Both great knots but there's a channel that tests line breaks with a pull meter and both the uni and double pitzen were just average. For braid the fish'n'fool knot was over 100% knot strength and for flouro and mono the double san diego jam won out, just interesting I suppose
This is a great knot. Difficult to tie with light lines (at least for me it is). I tie the knot that Shaw Grigsby uses which is very similar with 3 tag ends. 6
If you become familiar with the standard uni knot, it becomes a lot easier to perform this one in my experience. The steps are identical with the exception of doubling the line at the start. Early on, I found this knot to be most difficult with rigid heavy leader lines. If you adjust the number of wraps you make to compensate for the thickness and flexibility of the lines, it helps a ton! Thanks for watching 🙂
Looks like a harder-to-tie version of the double pitzen. In the end, the knot is vitually identical but this one has more wraps (5-6 vs 3 wraps with double pitzen). I have to admit that after watching your double pitzen tying video and this one, I won't be using this one on the boat all day. Instead of having 6 rods with 6 setups, I usually just use my favorite rod and tie different lures, hooks, etc. on that one multiple times throughout the day. This knot takes quite a bit of separate manipulation steps with your fingers, seems like. (Liked and subscribed to your channel, regardless)
The Double Pitzen is certainly my preferred on the water, and it's the stronger of the two when using mono/fluoro (in theory - the clinch style of knots are stronger for those line types due to their tactility and ability to bite into the line). However, if I was tying braid directly to a lure (e.g. a topwater frog), I would trust the double uni knot more. Lately, I've been taking around 2-4 setups with me (bank fishing). At any given time, I may have 4-6 different knots on my setups depending on the line types, rod actions, and techniques. I don't subscribe to the idea that there is a perfect knot for all applications; I think learning a variety has been quite helpful for me! P.S. - I'm currently expanding on my fishing adventures and fishing tips playlist, but the next three knots I will be covering are the FG knot, the Alberto Knot, and the loop knot. Thanks for watching!
@@nextlevelangling I've heard of the loop knot, of course, but never the other two. Sounds interesting! 😃 Update: I just watched your loop knot one and it's not the knot I've always heard people call the "loop knot". Glad I watched it! My fishing buddies are going to wonder how I'm a knot guru all of a sudden lol I'm from the South so I'll probably have to strategically rename the Double Pitzen to "Triple Frog Knot" or something. I already foresee that being "How do you tie that Dual Piston again?" 😜
Should I be able to pull the knot up and down the line once tightened? I’ve followed this method shown, but on tightening down I’m able to slide the knot up and down my mainline? Is this ok? Or does it make the knot weaker? Thanks for your time.
The knot technically will always have the ability to slide back up the mainline, but it shouldn’t happen easily. You may need to tighten up your first cinch. This knot functions similar to a noose, such that it tightens the more you pull on it.
Once upon a time I had a spool of 30 denier silk (1 mile weighed less than a nickel). I was wondering if it might be suitable for ultralight fishing line. Well, I found it to be unbreakable. Sort of. It was so slippery I couldn’t tie any sort of knot in it that wouldn’t just slide apart under tension! So much for that experiment.
Interesting! Can’t say I’ve ever tried fine silk as fishing line. Have you tried a simple Palomar knot? If you’re tying directly to a hook, the snell might work as well, if you make enough wraps
@@nextlevelangling No commonly used fishing knot, regardless of number of turns, held. I retired from the Coast Guard after thirty years, so I tried the doubled bowline, doubled and tripled figure eight, and waxing with beeswax in the hopes to making it “stickier.” All failed. Oh well.
I agree son. Big river cats are caught on strong knots. Tie one on either end of a 3ft. Piece. Stretch it till it breaks. The double uni with all the 50lb. Leader materials I had. The only knots knots that held consistently were the double uni. Tie some knots and break line or knot for us. Thank you for the great watch.
The strongest knot for mono is the Fish-N-Fool knot, but it's very difficult to tie properly with stiffer mono (anything over 12 lb test). My go-to knot for mono > 12lb test is the San Diego Jam Knot. The Double San Diego Jam would be stronger, but still a little tougher to tie with stiff mono. With 20 lb. test, I would go with the standard SDJ knot with 6 - 7 wraps. 118% breaking strength and easy to tie. 👍
This is my favorite Saltwater knot to date. 50lb braid using an Improved uni knot to 500 lb leader to a 16 ounce 10" Jig for them big ole LINGCOD. I've tried to break this knot and can't do it.
Thanks for the sub! I would say it depends on the purpose. If you’re top water froggin’ for bass, this knot might be overkill, and a simple palomar would suffice for 50lb braid. If you’re throwing topwater spooks for big saltwater game fish, this knot might be the better choice. I use this particular knot anytime I tie directly to a topwater lure with lighter braid in the 20lb range and it’s worked great for me in those scenarios (basically any topwater lure with treble hooks). The only time I use 50lb in freshwater is for topwater frog lures that require a little more power on the hook set. Hope this helps!
It works for any line, but for mono and fluoro, I would only use for lighter line. It could be really tough to cinch it down with thick stiff line. If you use 20lb test or higher for those, I’d suggest a standard uni knot. This one does great with any braid though because it’s flexible
@@SunGodLuffy_5 one thing I’ve learned is that all knots go by multiple names! I try my best to use the most commonly used names, but some of them have more than one commonly used name. I like double uni knot for this one because it aligns with the way that the double clinch, double Pitzen, and double San Diego jam knots are named.
I commend You on your time and patience doing this demonstration in an easy/excellent manner that even a novice would be lame not to LIKE & SUBSCRIBED like I done. Great Content~Looking for more from the channel.
They're all strong, but they can have significant differences in breaking strength based on line type. For example, both the Palomar knot and Berkley Braid knot tested at 124% strength with braided line, but with fluoro, the Palomar tested at 101%, while the Berkley braid knot tested at 131%
@@nextlevelangling Mate anything above 100 is golden, you can't ask for more than that. Tying braid leader is always risky compared to a fluoro/mono leader anyway as the abrasion resistance of braid is as much as wet toilet paper.
@@richardjones2811 yea tying braid directly to a lure only comes into play for me with topwater frogs and a couple other top waters, never as a leader. I understand your point as well, but in the example I gave, there was a 30% difference in strength, it’s pretty significant
Tying a uni knot on a bight does not make it any stronger than a uni knot tied on a single strand. The weak point is still where the wraps clench the standing end of the line, which is still just a single strand. It also makes the knot harder to dress fair, which can weaken the knot. Keep it simple, keep it single.
@@nextlevelangling No Sir, I did not. But, as a level 3 rope access technician, I have a very good understanding of the physics involved in lines and methods of connection.
@@nextlevelangling I would also point out that what you are tying is not a double uni knot. A double uni knot is used to connect 2 lines, by creating a uni knot with the working end of one line around the standing end of the other, and then repeating with the other line.
I might use the Palomar if the braid > 60lb. test, but otherwise, I’ll use the stronger knots like the Double Uni or the Fish-N-Fool knot. Both are more than 30% stronger than the Palomar
@@TimE-bc9ez appreciate the feedback, I can work on speeding it up. You could work on the delivery of your constructive criticism though - you come off as a bit of a dickhead
@@TimE-bc9ez no worries brotha, I’m not the sensitive type. You’re right about the slow pace of the videos too, but I promise I hate hearing myself talk - I’m introverted
Двойной не вязал, но обычный - легко вяжется (и 10 оборотов), затягивает, можно - размотать, не развязывается, дополнительно усилен - "обратной восьмеркой": с оборотом - вокруг оси = фиксируется - подстраховкой. ________________________________
What a fantastic knot. Thanks for teaching this!
No worries brotha 🤙
The only true 100% breaking knot...only knot I ever tie
When the lure is $20+ and the fish are big - this knot right here 💪🏻🪢
Irrespective of the semantic(s) issue, a great video explaining the tying of this important angling knot…good job, and tyvm for it, Jake…. 👌🏼
@@ginochiavacci1757 Thank you 🙏
You're a life saver, I just bought a Swimbait underground DRT Klash 9 and needed to learn this knot at some point because I would hate to lose a $140 glidebait, most channels are way too fast or not detailed enough when it comes to the fine details.
@@loganjohnson9073 thank you - I’m glad I could help! Nobody wants to lose a 100+$ lure 💯
If you’re tying directly to fluoro, I would suggest the double San Diego jam knot. It’s a little stronger with fluoro and in my opinion, easier to tie with fluoro as well. I have a tutorial for the double SDJ on my playlist 👍
This has been the most helpful demo of this knot I've watched yet, thank you!
@@BenTedesco thanks for watching! 🤙
New Sub'r! The way you get at it and no B.S. get to showing this with extended slow play is perfect. Thank you for sharing these knot tying vids!
Thank you! 🙏
The uni knot is what I use for swivels and hooks; sometimes I like to use the snail knot for my 1/0 circle hook when I’m jigging with a slip bobber;
I will definitely use the double uni knot for my swivels from now on.
I really like the snail knot also! I usually use 10 wraps on it. It’s not only strong, but it also holds the hook in a good position, especially when using a live night crawler, and I’ve lost less hooks using this as well!
double uni is a great choice for a swivel, especially for a braid to swivel connection. I'm a huge fan of the snell as well - I always use the snell for octopus hooks 👍
I have tied the Uni Knot for over 40 years saw someone test this knot on another channel with 65 lb. Mono he had heavy leather gloves couldn’t break it almost cut thru his gloves.I have been using it since for anything over 8 lb test. The Double Pitzen knot is equally as strong.
Both great knots but there's a channel that tests line breaks with a pull meter and both the uni and double pitzen were just average. For braid the fish'n'fool knot was over 100% knot strength and for flouro and mono the double san diego jam won out, just interesting I suppose
thanks for showing it and explaining it well i finaly got it after 4 vids
Glad I could help!
Great knot but I will use the palomar as it is a lot easier to use and I’ve never lost a fish with it..
Palomar is a fantastic knot. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it 💪🏻
thanks man, great great video i got it the first time,
No problem brotha - thank you for watching 🙏
Super strong
💪
Double uni is super strong!!
One of the strongest for braid 💯
This is a great knot. Difficult to tie with light lines (at least for me it is). I tie the knot that Shaw Grigsby uses which is very similar with 3 tag ends. 6
If you become familiar with the standard uni knot, it becomes a lot easier to perform this one in my experience. The steps are identical with the exception of doubling the line at the start. Early on, I found this knot to be most difficult with rigid heavy leader lines. If you adjust the number of wraps you make to compensate for the thickness and flexibility of the lines, it helps a ton! Thanks for watching 🙂
Looks like a harder-to-tie version of the double pitzen. In the end, the knot is vitually identical but this one has more wraps (5-6 vs 3 wraps with double pitzen). I have to admit that after watching your double pitzen tying video and this one, I won't be using this one on the boat all day. Instead of having 6 rods with 6 setups, I usually just use my favorite rod and tie different lures, hooks, etc. on that one multiple times throughout the day. This knot takes quite a bit of separate manipulation steps with your fingers, seems like. (Liked and subscribed to your channel, regardless)
The Double Pitzen is certainly my preferred on the water, and it's the stronger of the two when using mono/fluoro (in theory - the clinch style of knots are stronger for those line types due to their tactility and ability to bite into the line). However, if I was tying braid directly to a lure (e.g. a topwater frog), I would trust the double uni knot more.
Lately, I've been taking around 2-4 setups with me (bank fishing). At any given time, I may have 4-6 different knots on my setups depending on the line types, rod actions, and techniques. I don't subscribe to the idea that there is a perfect knot for all applications; I think learning a variety has been quite helpful for me!
P.S. - I'm currently expanding on my fishing adventures and fishing tips playlist, but the next three knots I will be covering are the FG knot, the Alberto Knot, and the loop knot.
Thanks for watching!
@@nextlevelangling I've heard of the loop knot, of course, but never the other two. Sounds interesting! 😃 Update: I just watched your loop knot one and it's not the knot I've always heard people call the "loop knot". Glad I watched it! My fishing buddies are going to wonder how I'm a knot guru all of a sudden lol I'm from the South so I'll probably have to strategically rename the Double Pitzen to "Triple Frog Knot" or something. I already foresee that being "How do you tie that Dual Piston again?" 😜
Should I be able to pull the knot up and down the line once tightened? I’ve followed this method shown, but on tightening down I’m able to slide the knot up and down my mainline? Is this ok? Or does it make the knot weaker? Thanks for your time.
The knot technically will always have the ability to slide back up the mainline, but it shouldn’t happen easily. You may need to tighten up your first cinch. This knot functions similar to a noose, such that it tightens the more you pull on it.
Once upon a time I had a spool of 30 denier silk (1 mile weighed less than a nickel). I was wondering if it might be suitable for ultralight fishing line. Well, I found it to be unbreakable. Sort of. It was so slippery I couldn’t tie any sort of knot in it that wouldn’t just slide apart under tension! So much for that experiment.
Interesting! Can’t say I’ve ever tried fine silk as fishing line. Have you tried a simple Palomar knot? If you’re tying directly to a hook, the snell might work as well, if you make enough wraps
@@nextlevelangling No commonly used fishing knot, regardless of number of turns, held. I retired from the Coast Guard after thirty years, so I tried the doubled bowline, doubled and tripled figure eight, and waxing with beeswax in the hopes to making it “stickier.” All failed. Oh well.
I agree son. Big river cats are caught on strong knots. Tie one on either end of a 3ft. Piece. Stretch it till it breaks. The double uni with all the 50lb. Leader materials I had. The only knots knots that held consistently were the double uni. Tie some knots and break line or knot for us. Thank you for the great watch.
What is the best knot for 20 lb mono?
The strongest knot for mono is the Fish-N-Fool knot, but it's very difficult to tie properly with stiffer mono (anything over 12 lb test). My go-to knot for mono > 12lb test is the San Diego Jam Knot. The Double San Diego Jam would be stronger, but still a little tougher to tie with stiff mono. With 20 lb. test, I would go with the standard SDJ knot with 6 - 7 wraps. 118% breaking strength and easy to tie. 👍
@@nextlevelangling Thank you so much man!!!
@@CamsFishingandTips 🤘
I use plyers to pull the knot all the way down. Otherwise it wont bunch up all the way with a lot of mono lines.
Damn I need 4 hands to tie that haha got it with some help from my wife lol
Sounds like a keeper!
@@nextlevelangling haha 🤙 thanks for the video
This is my favorite Saltwater knot to date. 50lb braid using an Improved uni knot to 500 lb leader to a 16 ounce 10" Jig for them big ole LINGCOD. I've tried to break this knot and can't do it.
That sounds like a blast!
Get on the boat with us out of Avila beach california. 11/7, 6am Patriot sport fishing on the Phenix. @@nextlevelangling
Dude that was Sic...did it 2nd try...omg and i suck at knots
Hell yea man! Happy to help
I just subbed. Would you say this knot works great with 50lb braid or should I just use standard uni knot for 50lb braid?
Thanks for the sub! I would say it depends on the purpose. If you’re top water froggin’ for bass, this knot might be overkill, and a simple palomar would suffice for 50lb braid. If you’re throwing topwater spooks for big saltwater game fish, this knot might be the better choice. I use this particular knot anytime I tie directly to a topwater lure with lighter braid in the 20lb range and it’s worked great for me in those scenarios (basically any topwater lure with treble hooks). The only time I use 50lb in freshwater is for topwater frog lures that require a little more power on the hook set. Hope this helps!
You need to make a separate on cutting the lines. I keep cutting the wrong three lines. hahahahaahah. Keep kicking ass with them knots
Hah it happens!
Is the double uni knot also good for braided line?
Yes it is!
Nice but i did note you should have pulled the tag end on the loop and then the main line, then cut the tag end off.
Is this knot also for mono and flouro or just braid.
It works for any line, but for mono and fluoro, I would only use for lighter line. It could be really tough to cinch it down with thick stiff line. If you use 20lb test or higher for those, I’d suggest a standard uni knot. This one does great with any braid though because it’s flexible
Its usually called the "double line uni knot" not to be confused with the braid to leader double uni
@@SunGodLuffy_5 one thing I’ve learned is that all knots go by multiple names! I try my best to use the most commonly used names, but some of them have more than one commonly used name. I like double uni knot for this one because it aligns with the way that the double clinch, double Pitzen, and double San Diego jam knots are named.
@@SunGodLuffy_5 forgot to mention I like “uni to uni knot” for the line to leader knot, since it’s technically two separate knots
I commend You on your time and patience doing this demonstration in an easy/excellent manner that even a novice would be lame not to LIKE & SUBSCRIBED like I done. Great Content~Looking for more from the channel.
Appreciate it! 🙏
To be honest any knot is really strong if you pass through the eye twice first.
They're all strong, but they can have significant differences in breaking strength based on line type. For example, both the Palomar knot and Berkley Braid knot tested at 124% strength with braided line, but with fluoro, the Palomar tested at 101%, while the Berkley braid knot tested at 131%
@@nextlevelangling Mate anything above 100 is golden, you can't ask for more than that. Tying braid leader is always risky compared to a fluoro/mono leader anyway as the abrasion resistance of braid is as much as wet toilet paper.
@@richardjones2811 yea tying braid directly to a lure only comes into play for me with topwater frogs and a couple other top waters, never as a leader. I understand your point as well, but in the example I gave, there was a 30% difference in strength, it’s pretty significant
looks like a double fishnfool knot
The Fish-N-Fool knot and double uni knot are both variations of the uni knot, so they have some similarities
Played the trombone in 6th grade 😅😂😅 #dead
True story! Also got mine at a yard sale 🤷🏻♂️
Tying a uni knot on a bight does not make it any stronger than a uni knot tied on a single strand. The weak point is still where the wraps clench the standing end of the line, which is still just a single strand. It also makes the knot harder to dress fair, which can weaken the knot. Keep it simple, keep it single.
Did you test them with a pull force gauge?
@@nextlevelangling No Sir, I did not. But, as a level 3 rope access technician, I have a very good understanding of the physics involved in lines and methods of connection.
@@nextlevelangling I would also point out that what you are tying is not a double uni knot. A double uni knot is used to connect 2 lines, by creating a uni knot with the working end of one line around the standing end of the other, and then repeating with the other line.
You need a lot more leader material also to tie this knot, so you would go through a lot more mono or fluoro tying this knot
@@nephewbob7264it's more like a doubled over uni knot rather than a double uni, which as you correctly say is for tying two different lines together
Just do Palomar
I might use the Palomar if the braid > 60lb. test, but otherwise, I’ll use the stronger knots like the Double Uni or the Fish-N-Fool knot. Both are more than 30% stronger than the Palomar
7 minutes to show how to tie a knot? Jesus Christ, people love to hear themselves talk
@@TimE-bc9ez appreciate the feedback, I can work on speeding it up. You could work on the delivery of your constructive criticism though - you come off as a bit of a dickhead
@@nextlevelangling well put sir, I will work on that. Sometimes I come across like a jerk because I am one
@@TimE-bc9ez no worries brotha, I’m not the sensitive type. You’re right about the slow pace of the videos too, but I promise I hate hearing myself talk - I’m introverted
I would rate this a 10/10 feedback loop. You both are perfection. 👍😁
This isn't a double uni .. 😀
What you’re thinking of, I call a uni to uni knot. What would you call this one?
Двойной не вязал, но обычный - легко вяжется (и 10 оборотов), затягивает, можно - размотать, не развязывается, дополнительно усилен - "обратной восьмеркой": с оборотом - вокруг оси = фиксируется - подстраховкой.
________________________________
Lol NOT a double uni !!!!!!
What would you call it?
@@nextlevelanglingdoubled over or double line uni