Opinions on Elbe line

JanoSA

New member
Hi All!

I took a hiatus from fishing for about 20 years. Much has changed in the product landscape since my last trip to the tackle shop. I recently started a whole new collection of tackle as many of my old rods were heavy, floppy dinosaurs in comparison to the newer stuff. When I started investing in gear again in 2021 a friend recommended I use braid and I had mixed results in the beginning due to buying the wrong stuff. I have since corrected my mistakes and am very happy after I finally found a product that works well. I am a generally light tackle guy with nothing over 7ft 6" or 3000 sized reels and 15 lb braid & I exclusively do artificial lure angling.

This brings me to my question:

I was happy to find my old reliable choice in monofilament, Double X, is still in the shop and I was tempted to just buy that, but alongside it, I noticed a Brand I am not familiar with: Elbe.

Now, the price difference between the two isn't really a factor, but I did notice the Elbe product is a little cheaper, which is what introduced doubt. Is Elbe a reliable brand with reliable products?

As most of the reading I have done shows that most anglers recommend fluorocarbon leaders for artificial lure stuff, I picked up two spools of Elbe's fluoro leader material and tested that out. It has performed decently with no real let-downs aside from one incident where I learnt that fluorocarbon is not as resilient as I had hoped when it comes to abrasion which cost me a Salmo lure on some rock. I am not unhappy with its performance and I have learnt to be a little more careful around structure. I have landed a few decent fish on it, most notably being a 7kg Barbel on 15 LB leader material. The leader was badly chewed up, but I did manage to land the fish. So I'm assuming their Fluorocarbon material isn't bad. It's not the most expensive but performed well enough for my purposes. I don't usually target Barbel on light tackle, but being the aggressive species that they are, I do often hook them.

I have a few Abu Garcia reels I used to use for Barbel. Specifically 5600 and 6500 series on 7ft heavy/medium-heavy casting rods. I'd like to throw some heavier line on there and put them into service again. As these do not get used that often & I am proficient at casting them I thought I might as well throw monofilament on there to offer some shock absorption. Probably something in the way of 14 &/or 20Lb. I also picked up a few smaller reels (2500 Daiwa Prorex, Okuma Ceymar C-30) requiring backing with lighter braid, so this purchase will likely do double duty for that too.

With the above in mind, Do you have any experience with Elbe's line? Specifically their MegaAbrasion monofilament? Care to share your opinion and experience? Do they make a solid product, or should I avoid it? Opinions on their and Fluorocarbon leader material is also welcome!

I have tried to find online reviews, but aside from one on FB post, I came up short. Neither could I find much info from the manufacturer. Couldn't even find their website. Perhaps my Google-Fu is weak.

Your input is greatly appreciated. I look forward to reading your responses.

Kind Regards,
Jano
 

willem wikkel spies

Moderator
Staff member
Elbe????

We all know the well branded fishing lines available to us.
My advise would be, not to stray away from tried and tested lines.

Especially if you hook into a life time fish with a light set up.
If its for everyday use and you are not fussed about the results, then you can try it out.
You can even give us some feedback on it.

Elbe was known for fishing rods.
Most tackle manufacturers now days, would get stuff they can rebrand and sell under their own name.
Is it top quality? we not sure.
it might be good enough for the normal everyday angler, but not for the specialist.
 

JanoSA

New member
As you mention Willem, I have heard good things about their rods for boat and kayak fishing here on the forum, but nothing about their lines. Thanks for the input.

I have found their lines in every physical shop I have been in and reputable online shops. I have also seen one or two Youtube videos produced by Kingfisher here in SA that use their Fluorocarbon leaders, which is what prompted that purchase. This made me believe that it should be at least fairly known in SA. Still on the fence though. As you say, fish of a lifetime etc. I get out to the water maybe once a month. I have no interest in losing fish for no good reason.

Look forward to more opinions.
 
I've caught big tuna in their flouro, nothing wrong with it..That said, big tuna is really the only instance where the price of the flouro warrants its use for me.

Nothing wrong with the elbe mono either..I find it very very close to the sufix high abrasion though the elbe line is slippery like it has some coating, in the beginning I had knots pull through until I realized and added a few more turns when using that line..It is MUCH cheaper than double x, though double x is REALLY good line, of your best monos for normal use.
 

JanoSA

New member
Thanks for the input Doc. It is appreciated. Useful info on testing/adapting knots. I tend to be the overly cautious type and do breaking strain tests on anything new I try. Mostly just because I like to know the limits of my equipment. Will definitely test knot variations if I do go with the Elbe products and report back here. Thanks
 

JanoSA

New member
Okay, so I was bored at work today, which gave me the excuse to leave early and stop by my local tackle shop on the way home. Decided that I'd pick up a spool of Elbe to conduct testing, and obviously also buy the obligatory lure or two while I'm there. I learnt 5 things today:

1. The Halco Sourcerer 68 is an epic little swimmer. Gave it a go around the pool. Definitely getting a few more of them.

2. Elbe line seems like a solid product. Did a quick round of testing to destruction. Took 1,5m sections, tied them to steel rings so that each section is approximately 1m long when tied ( believe standard besting is done on 1m sections, just with clams on the ends, not knots). lifted a water can prefilled to weight on my kitchen scale. With a properly tied and dressed knot, Elbe consistently breaks above its rating by about 5-8%. Repeated the same test with the same knots 3 times.

3. A 6 turn Clinch knot is a solid knot when tied with Monofilament. Doing a double wrap around the hook/swivel seems to have definite advantages.

4. The Loop (Rapala) knot is a compromise when it comes to strength.

5. When a 25 Lb monofilament breaks above its rated strength, it comes back at you with considerable momentum. As evidenced in the picture, the first one caught me off guard.
 

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JanoSA

New member
Hi Willem,

I tested the Elbe "Super tough, Mega Abrasion" 25LB in 0.4mm Nylon Copolymer monofilament. Specifically used the super bright red colour.

Was very happy with the line during testing. I'll be throwing it on one of my two Abu reels this week and see how things go
 
Yeah I'm pretty sure it comes out the same factory as the suffix line, though I'm speculating..with a slightly different formulation or coating to make it more slick but it acts exactly the same..Super cheap, I got no problems with the quality..Used it under lockdown as no stocks of my normal line and caught many gamefish on it, 0.40 to 0.55, light and heavy spinning and sliding. Great slick line for sliding..just double check your knots before throwing as they may slip out if not tied and cinched lekker.
 
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