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 FLOAT RIGS 18 / 01 / 06
 

DIY Slider Floats

How to Use and Make Your Own Slider Float

Using the Slider

Although a slider float can be used in shallow water, when the bankside vegetation is too heavy to allow you to bring the rod up to the vertical before casting, it is more commonly used in depths of water of around 15 - 20 feet.

The slider float allows you to cast around 5ft of line or less from your rod top even though you will be fishing at a much greater depth.

The first job is to put the slider float on your line, followed by a small bead. Next you pinch on the bulk shot, and attach the hook length using your preferred method.

The bulk shot goes about 3 - 4ft from the hook, and in between this goes a number 4 tell-tale or dropper shot, about ten inches from the hook.

Some people put a small shot about a foot from the top of the bulk shot for the slider to rest on, but I have never found the need to do this, so consider it optional.

Let us say you are fishing in 15ft of water; you then need to tie on a sliding stop-knot above the float or you could use two rubber float stops. If you think the depth is around 15ft, move the sliding stop-knot or float stops up the line to around that depth.

When casting out you will notice that the slider float is only about 3 - 4ft from the hook. As you cast out, leave the bale-arm open so as to allow the bulk shot to pull the line through the eye of the float.

When the slider hits the stop-knot, you will then be able to adjust the knot either deeper or shallower until you have got the correct depth.

Ideally the hook bait should be on the bottom, but the dropper or tell tale shot should be off the bottom. It also helps if the wind is coming off your back, so that the float is not continually drifting back to the bank. I find that this is the ideal way to position yourself on the bank.

River Slider

You will notice that the slider float used for river fishing is somewhat different to the stillwater slider.

The Slider used for river fishing is smaller and has two standoff eyes to allow free passage of the line before the float hits the stop-knot. As mentioned elsewhere on the forum, they are ideal for casting in between clumps of weed when you don't want your hook length to get caught up. They are also used in exactly the same way as the stillwater slider when the depth is greater than the length of your rod.

DIY Slider Float

  1. Take a 9 inch length of peacock quill and lightly sandpaper it down to remove any bits of quill fibre, being careful not to remove its natural waterproof coating
  2. Mark the centre of each end of a piece of balsa
  3. Burn a hole in the top of the balsa to take the quill, and fix the quill in place with waterproof wood glue
  4. Do the same at the bottom end of the balsa to accommodate the inch and a half long piece of cocktail stick, making sure the stick is long enough to take a good wrapping of window lead, available from DIY shops
  5. At this stage, it is now okay to shape the balsa body leaving a nice taper towards the quill end of the float, and also the bottom end
  6. Form a 'U' shape in a piece of copper wire or strong fishing line
  7. Put a small swivel onto the wire, and whip the ends of the loop onto the end of the cocktail stick
  8. Cover the window lead with Araldite resin, and varnish the whipping on the loop

Ideally, the float should be weighted with enoughwindow lead to sink the balsa body and about one third of the peacock quill. The purpose of this is to ensure the float is heavy enough to go out first when casting.

The bulk shot goes about 3 - 4ft from the hook, with a number 4 dropper shot about ten inches from the hook

click for bigger picture)

All it needs now is a paint job. I would advise having two colours on the float tip. The tip itsself could be fluorescent orange with about an inch and a half of white underneath it and a contrasting colour underneath that to make lift bites easier to spot at distance.

About the Rigs Page

The Rigs Page is a library of features to illustrate all those rigs that will be useful to both beginners and experienced anglers.

The rigs can be extremely simple and well known, or very complicated and little known, it doesn't matter providing they make some kind of sense and have a really practical application.

It could be a standard running leger rig that a beginner will appreciate seeing in pictures, or a very complicated anti-eject carp rig that the experienced carp angler would like to see.

If you wish to contribute a rig to this section please remember that the emphasis is on illustration rather than words. Good line drawings are fine in the absence of photographs. Please send to graham@fishingmagic.com


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Discuss this article, 1 of 62 messages, read more:
BAZ (Angel of the North) 
Posted: 04/01/06 09:56:00 00
Does anybody still use slider floats, or better still, make their own?
I made half a dozen or so a number of years ago, and put them to good use. My catch rate didn’t improve over more shallow type water fishing but I was catching in the deeper water where a normal waggler set up would be impossible.

Then the Polaris float became available, and everybody seemed to go over to these types of float in favour of the slider.

Apart from the obvious, in that the Polaris finds its own depth, is there any other benefit over the slider float?
Or do you prefer the slider simply for memories of yester year, and keeping with tradition?
Read more...
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