Good job, thanks for sharing! To tie up a bunch of legs, I leave the fibers on the stem, clamp the stem on the vice and tie on the vice. I can then easily select "book-matched" leg pairs for size & L-R orientation.
I have a hard time with the dexterity for this so I applaud your skill! I’ll work on it a bit but thinking & am wondering if soaking them would help with flexibility like biots. I’m just gonna have to stick with the Letort Hopper!
Soaking them could help. Never tried it. You can also purchase these pre tied from a few companies like Semperfli out of the uk. Definitely saves the frustration level and can focus on simply tying them on
Very nice! Like the idea with low tack wax. Thanks
Glad you like it!
Good job, thanks for sharing! To tie up a bunch of legs, I leave the fibers on the stem, clamp the stem on the vice and tie on the vice. I can then easily select "book-matched" leg pairs for size & L-R orientation.
For sure. Leaving them on the stem makes is nice to keep track of them too
Thanks for the tip.Simple video and very usefull
Thanks for watching
I have a hard time with the dexterity for this so I applaud your skill! I’ll work on it a bit but thinking & am wondering if soaking them would help with flexibility like biots. I’m just gonna have to stick with the Letort Hopper!
Soaking them could help. Never tried it. You can also purchase these pre tied from a few companies like Semperfli out of the uk. Definitely saves the frustration level and can focus on simply tying them on
like this video-thanks
Thanks for liking
What type of tweezers are those?
Dr slick. I see on google they are called the bishop tweezers