Poly Leader Sink Rate Calculator

Poly Leader Sink Rate Calculator

Estimate an adjusted poly leader sink rate, countdown time, downstream drift, and fishing depth from leader rating, tippet, fly profile, current, cast angle, and retrieve speed.

📌Scenario presets

Sink rate settings

Poly leader sink forecast

Adjusted sink rate 0.0 in/sec
Rated IPS adjusted by rig and water drag
Countdown to target 0 seconds
Target depth divided by vertical rate
Depth after countdown 0.0 ft
Vertical sink minus retrieve lift
Downstream drift 0.0 ft
Current speed multiplied by countdown

Full breakdown

📋Poly leader density reference

Hover

Rated sink0.5
Best depth1-3
UseSkinny

Intermediate

Rated sink1.2
Best depth2-5
UseLoch

Sink 3

Rated sink3.0
Best depth5-9
UsePull

Sink 7

Rated sink7.0
Best depth10+
UseDeep

📐Sink rate and rig tables

Leader type Rated IPS Rated cm/s Approx 6 ft countdown Typical presentation
Hover / neutral0.51.3144 secSkinny water, subsurface wake
Intermediate1.23.060 secStillwater buzzer, shallow baitfish
Slow sink 1.51.53.848 secSoft hackle, slow swing
Medium sink 2.52.56.429 secBank streamer, loch drift
Sink 33.07.624 secPulling streamers near dropoffs
Sink 55.012.714 secReservoir ledges and strong wind
Sink 77.017.810 secDeep pike flies and fast pools
Extra super fast8.020.39 secShort deep shot with heavy flies
Rig factor Low drag value High drag value Calculator effect What it means
Tippet length2 ft8 ftSlower with lengthMore unweighted mono holds the fly up
Tippet diameter0.006 in0.014 inThicker sinks slowerDiameter adds water resistance
Fly weight0.01 oz0.25 ozWeight increases rateBead, cone, or tube mass pulls down
Fly bulkSparseFoamBulk reduces rateHair, foam, and rabbit trap water
Retrieve0 in/sec15 in/secFast retrieve liftsLine tension makes the sink path flatter
Cast angle25 deg90 degSteeper sinks deeperVertical component is the useful depth

🐟Species and presentation windows

Target Common leader Starting count Working depth Adjustment cue
Stillwater troutIntermediate to Sink 35-20 sec2-8 ftCount longer until takes stop rising
River troutHover to Sink 2.52-8 sec1-4 ftShorten count if ticking bottom
Salmon swingSink 3 to Sink 73-12 sec3-9 ftUse drift result for lead angle
Pike streamerSink 5 to Sink 78-25 sec6-14 ftAccount for bulky fly drag
Sea troutIntermediate to Sink 54-15 sec2-7 ftLift rises when strips get fast
Saltwater flatsHover to Intermediate1-6 sec1-3 ftAvoid too much countdown over grass

💡Practical checks

Tip: Rated IPS is measured in controlled conditions. Treat the adjusted sink rate as a starting countdown, then confirm by contact, follows, and strike depth.

Tip: If the fly tracks above fish, first add countdown. If it still rides high during the retrieve, reduce retrieve speed or shorten tippet before changing leader density.

TIP: Sink rates aren’t always what they seem The tag that says “sinks three inches per second” is not always true. You have to consider leader, your tippet, the added weight of a big fly, and pull of casting into current. Line companies test their leaders in controlled lab setting without any drag behind them. It is not much like how you fish. Knowing your own rig’s true sink rate are far better than trusting some number on a package. You want to know its performance in the current and under tension, not just an out-of-context claim.

This page’s calculator closes that gap between what happens in theory versus in practice. It factors in variables within your control (cast angle, water speed, fly profile, tippet length) and apply those to base sink rating. It accounts for physics when you fish subsurface presentations. For shallow flats fishing with a hover leader, math is easy enough to perform in head. Things gets complicated when using intermediate or fast-sink leaders in deeper rivers or lochs. The tool do all of that math for you so that you can focus on timing and casting.

Understanding How Flies Sink in Real Life

The sink rate change dramatically with tippet length. Longer lengths (either fluorocarbon or mono) create a drag force that holds the fly up even if you have heavier leader. The calculator includes this drag penalty. That’s important since most anglers blame leader density issues on having too much untapered line behind their leader. Going from a heavy leader to one rated for more sinking power won’t always help, shortening your tippet can get you deeper than going down in leader size. It is a little thing, but it would of been a huge deal for stealth and simplicity.

Consider also profile of your fly. Wet flies with thin hackle slice through the water with low resistance, letting the leader take over on sink rate. Foamy bobbies and chunky strips of bunny fur trap air and generate noticeable lift. Buoyancy drag gets factored into the calculator. When you’re swinging that big streamer, what gives with a deep-sink leader not getting down? It may well be fly battling gravity. Knowing the tradeoff help you make smarter rig decisions. You can do this before you step off bank.

Adding to the complexity is water current that will have your fly drifting downstream. It tells you both how deep you are and how far your fly has traveled during your countdown. Knowing your lead distance can be as critical as knowing your depth when fishing down a river. You could be perfectly positioned for depth with your fly, but have it thirty feet downstream of where you wanted. That’s where the drift estimate comes into play. It help you strip and swing your line better to account for that drift.

Sink efficiency also depend on cast angle. With a flat cast you spread that leader out and lessen vertical part of sink. Direct, steep presentations let gravity do its thing more efficient. This is the kind of geometric reality that the tool takes into account. Straight presentation isn’t a matter of throwing harder but rather about making more efficient casts. These are tweaks that turn numbers into actualy strategy.

Remember, however, don’t take these numbers as truth. It’s just a baseline. Things differ out on water. Wetting of flies, wind chill and water temperature can alter the rate of sinking beyond what a stationary calculator might explain. Your best bet is to believe the math for planning and then confirm by sight when you’re actualy fishing.

Observe the track of fly. Feel pull on line. Is it up high? Before changing leaders, try shortening tippet or slowing down in the retrieve. The more precise you can get the better. This isn’t rocket science and doesn’t require a PhD in physics but it does require that you pay attention. Inches of water depth matter. Seconds in your countdown make or break keepers from empties. These small details improve presentations for you. You worry about the fish, and the tool will crunch the numbers.

Poly Leader Sink Rate Calculator

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