Site icon Fly Fishing Science

Anatomy of a fishing hook

Anatomy of a fishing hook

This is a short article about that part of our fishing tackle at the business end of our setup. Most modern hooks a made from wire that is shaped into a hook, with the thickness of the wire being referred to as the gauge of the hook. In some instances a fine wire is used to minimise the weight of the hook, e.g. for dry fly fishing. In other cases a heavier wire is used e.g. if targeting larger fish and there is a risk the wire will straighten. In some cases the hook has been forged, or flattened, to add extra strength. In most cases the hook is coated or finished to prevent rusting.

The size of the hook is expressed with a number which may fall into two ranges. For smaller hooks the number increases as it gets smaller, ranging from #1 through to a size #32 (which is tiny). For larger hooks the number increases with increasing hook size, typically ranging from 1/0 up to 20/0. The /0 scale being called the aught (pronounced ott or oh), with 10/0 being 10 aught. There is little by way of an industry standard when it comes to hook sizes, with some manufacturers claiming the size of the hook is related to the length of the hook without the eye and others the size of the gape or both.

All fishing hooks have an eye, shank, bend and point. Most hooks have a barb. Through time and for a variety of fishing needs there are a wide variety of different hooks out there with variations of each of these features.  

The X-factor is another code that the industry use to designate variations in hook features. Heavier gauge hooks are often described as 2X or 3X, denoting a hook gauge that is heavier for the same hook size. In other instances the 2X is used to describe a shank that is longer or a gape that is wider.

Tight Lines

Greg

Exit mobile version