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Berkley Big Game vs. OPST Lazar Line

36K views 57 replies 32 participants last post by  Rick J  
#1 · (Edited)
Personally I can't tell that much difference in them, except for the price. One works about as good as the other. Anyone have any thoughts on this.
 
#3 ·
Has the "slickest running line out there" property actually been lab-tested against all other running lines??

If so, where are the published results? or is this "in-house"/"commercially sensitive" data?
 
#7 ·
David1123

I do like the OPST running line a lot, I just think its way too expensive. I've only used mine a few times and I need to cut it back 15 or 20 feet already, too many nicks in it. With the Berkley line after I cut it back a few times I just trash it and put on another 50 cents worth. But I do think the OPST short Skagit lines are really great. By far the best Skagit line I've ever used.
 
#9 ·
Davd1123

Both lines are different for sure and I believe they both do the same job equally well. When I was just getting into two handed fishing I talked to a sales associate at a major west coast fly shop and he explained to me all about the different kinds of running lines they sold. I asked him which one did he use and he said "none of them, I use Berkley Big Game".
 
#10 ·
You can't buy OPST lazar running line in bulk (where you have more than 2 reels to fill), but you can buy Berkley Big Game (solar green) in bulk.

For $32, you get 50m (164 feet) of the lazar line mono [roughly comparable in price to almost all other "specialised" aka overpriced mono 'running' lines]

When you buy in bulk (more than 50m spools), Big Game mono 40lb is available for $1.00 per 80 feet (~$2.00 per 164 feet).

Now, anyone try to persuade me that OPST lazar running line is 16 times better (slicker, more 'hydrophobic', more durable, impervious to memory, and performs in a wide range of temperatures) than Berkley Big Game mono?

Answers on a postage stamp, please :rolleyes:
 
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#11 ·
Hello,
Have been fishing Lazerline for about a year. I've found it works well in cooler climates, however, just spent a week in the mid-west fishing it hard for small mouth bass in 80 degrees of heat: Found it bunched and tangled. Just returned to the PNW and fished Puget Sound this evening for Pinks and Silvers with the same running line-same result; tangles and a lot of kinks. I trashed the line. Thinking of just going Berkley Big Game. Maybe fishing a few sessions with Berkley Big Game and when the line beignis to tangle/kink, replace with 100ft of relatively inexpensive Berkley Big Game.( note: had the same issue with Rio Slickshooter in warmwater)
 
#14 ·
David1123

All mono running lines get nicked and kinks in them, I just can't see paying premium price for something that does the same thing. I'll probably use the this premium grade running line if they drop the price to about $10. Even at $10 its still a premium price compared to BG.
 
#15 ·
All mono running lines get nicked and kinks in them, I just can't see paying premium price for something that does the same thing. I'll probably use the this premium grade running line if they drop the price to about $10. Even at $10 its still a premium price compared to BG.
Berkley Big Game mono on 50m spools is around $12 or so, which is still about a third of the current price of the 50m spools of Lazar.
 
#16 ·
As the saying goes...

... ya can't please all of the people, all of the time. The fact is, that we all don't do things exactly the same or perceive things exactly the same. I just got off of a week long video shoot for OPST using a Lazar line that had already been in use since early June. We fished for a week in 85+ degree weather for bass and pike and I had
no problems whatsoever with my line and did not incur any damage to the line during that angling session. I do not 'baby' my equipment, but I also don't do abusive actions to it either such as walk on my line or pull aggressively on it when it tangles around my reel or butt guide, etc. I do employ actions to promote the longevity of my line, such as de-twist it if'n it gets twisted, or mitigate any possible sources of abrasion (on one of my reels, the drag knob is heavily knurled and if/when my runner gets caught around it that knurling can abrade the runner, so I wrapped it with rubber tape).

Personally, I perceive quite a difference between the Lazar and Big Game. However, if'n an individual cannot distinguish a difference, or does not feel that there is much of a difference, then by golly don't don't buy the Lazar... seems like a pretty simple decision process to me! Do I think that the Lazar is 16times better than the Big Game? No... but if'n I used that same line of reasoning for rods or reels or hooks or feathers, etc., boy would my tackle lineup be different than what it is now!

And, one note of interest... how many flyfishers would in fact be using Big Game at all if it hadn't been 'exposed' here on these Speypages by... ?
 
#18 ·
And, one note of interest... how many flyfishers would in fact be using Big Game at all if it hadn't been 'exposed' here on these Speypages by... ?
I have been using Big Game or one of the earlier Triline products before Big Game for the better part of 50 years. I learned about shooting heads in the sixties from an article by Myron Gregory.

Jerry
 
#19 · (Edited)
David1123

I mainly looked at 164 ft. of line for $32.00 vs. 595 yds. of 25lbs. BG for $9.00. I really do think that OPST products are some of the best I've seen on the market, mainly their short Skagit heads. On some of the tight spaces I fish their a God send, it just seemed there mono running lines are a bit over priced. But if this new mono running line is as durable and performs the way they claim it does then I'll say the price is not a factor. I've only used mine maybe 6 hours at most, and that's not really giving it a fare test.
 
#20 ·
David1123...

... it's all a matter of priorities and/or perspective. If economy is the primary concern, then the Big Game is unbeatable in my opinion. Before 'we discovered' the Lazar, Big Game was in fact my preferred runner over all others. Its price and durability were its most positive characteristics and I used it for many years because of those attributes. The major downside to Big Game in my experience, is its memory. This is/was especially so in colder weather conditions where I often had to stretch the Big Game several times per fishing session. I still think that Big Game is a great running line, but I find that I prefer Lazar because of its reduced coily-ness. As for soaking fly reel spools in water to alleviate coiling... sounds like a nice trick to keep in mind, bu for now I cannot justify the corrosion possibilities to my Hardy's.
 
#22 ·
If you have to soak your spool for 30 minutes before you fish, I would want another option. I would not want my old Perfects soaking and the backing soaking as well. Plus, my other reels (Mohlin, Saracione and Olson) don't have eaily removable spools.

I fish 70-80 days a year and the 30 minutes plus tear down and assembly of the soaking method makes the OPST worth it to me.
 
#23 ·
David1123

Just strip some of your running line out into a bucket of warm water, it doesn't have to be really hot just room temperature. You don't have to do this every time you go fishing either. I did this once and three days later it was still coil free. I think this works because the line absorbs the water relaxing it. The first time I did this I was using a Ross CLA reel that doesn't need oiling. I've never had to straighten a line ever. I've done this with BG and Slick Shooter. I believe I learned this trick here on the Speypages.
 
#32 ·
I have 3 Hardy SA reels I purchased new in 1982 from a dealer that was going out of business. I paid 74.00 apiece for those reels. I believe like Lefty Kreh, never spend more on fishing gear than you have to. I'll pay $1000 for a reel when hell freezes over!
I hear you! The most expensive reel i have is a Ross CLA 7 11/13wt reel and my wife bought it for me on clearance at a shop for 50% off. For trout reels, I would just palm drag for most of my time I have Fly fished. But then the shop that Supplies me with all my rod building supplies designed and started having a really nice reel made for them that doesn’t cost an arm and a leg. They are like family to me, own the oldest rod building supply company in the US and have been designing the reel for awhile. So now it costs me $135.00 for any size reel up to 9/11wt and $70.00 for each additional spool. I have around 14 of their reels and 8 extra spools. I will be doing a review of them on the Forum later on today.

A gentleman who is a well known Steelhead Guide and Spey Caster, became an adopted uncle to my wife and I and he is booked all through the season on the Salmon River and it’s tributaries in upstate NY from fall to spring for Steelhead and we gave him a reel for Christmas with an extra spool. I also used to supply him with custom built Spey rods outfitted with the reels for his customers to use and then if they liked the rod, they could buy a brand new one that he would have in his truck in rod tubes. So those reels got put to the test and they all held up to some serious abuse between the Chinook, Coho, big Brown Trout and big Steelhead in that area. He would guide all through the crazy winter up there when it was 5 degrees in February and the reels all held up fine.

My buddy had a melt down after his same expensive Orvis reel kept on junking out on him over and over again. He was having to send it back for repairs twice a year and we finally just gave him one of our extra reels since he was having to borrow one each time on the river lol. It amazes me how a reel that cheap can hold up so much better than these overly priced reels out there these days. I have tried other expensive reels and had them given to me by a relative who didn’t have time and physically wasn’t able to fly fish anymore and they had the drag system let go while fighting Bluefish and Stripers on the MA coastline. So I stopped using them and they sit on a shelf now after being sent back to be fixed lol. For Spey lines, we would wait till the end of the year and get the lines discounted at the shops when they were making room for all the new lines coming out. My wife and I would go up fishing in the middle of the week when there were less people on the river and would get first pick at the stuff put on sale Friday mornings. I loved going shop hopping there every Friday morning and so did my wife since she Spey casts too. Have a great weekend!
 
#26 ·
the Hardy's I'm refering to...

... are the older, leaded/lead-finished models. They corrode on the inside of the spool, under the area where the backing is, especially if that backing is Dacron. A more obvious visual is the appearance of a fine, white powder around any spool ventilation holes. The presence of this is a sure indicator of an established corrosion action occurring under the backing. Older, lead-finished Hardy's should be thoroughly 'aired out' after every fishing session... that is if you want to keep them in tip-top condition.
 
#28 ·
David1123

The last several days I've been doing a side by side comparison between the Lazar line and Berkley Big Game and there really is a considerable difference between the two. The Lazar line is much more user friendly, it floats, it doesn't coil, the knots tie much smaller, it even seems to be more durable. I like to fish a couple of times a week during the trout season and if it lasts all season long like I think it will, it definitely is worth the price. The only problem I have with it is sometimes it slips though my fingers, but then all mono running lines do.
 
#29 ·
I like the lazar line alot, and can tell a big difference, but as others have said if you cant tell a difference then there is no point in spending extra money on it. However, if you can tell an appreciable difference then why not buy it? I assume you guys have spent hundreds if not thousands of dollars on rods, reels, lines, and trips. So if this line works well then I dont see the argument that its too expensive at $30 being a good argument.