Outrigger Clip Distance Calculator

Outrigger Clip Distance Calculator

Calculate outrigger clip stations from pole length, base clearance, tip clearance, clip count, spread angle, elevation angle, and trolling pattern stagger.

📌Scenario presets

Outrigger geometry inputs

Measure usable pole length from the hinge or base to the tip pulley.
Keeps the first clip clear of hardtop supports, antennas, and rod tips.
Distance left between the outer clip and the tip or last guide.
Larger angles spread lines farther from the wake but reduce aft reach.
Used to estimate clip working height and halyard load angle.
Hardtop or bridge height where the rigger base is mounted.
Half-beam plus any outward base position; creates total line spread.
How much farther aft each outer clip's bait should be placed.
Extra station room for knots, crimps, swivels, and on-water tuning.

Outrigger clip distance results

Outer Clip Station - from base
Pole length - tip clearance, adjusted by margin.
Average Clip Gap - between neighboring clips
Usable clip run / gap count.
Total Line Spread - port outer clip to starboard outer clip
2 x (hull offset + horizontal station reach).
Suggested Lure Stagger - inside to outside bait offsets
Setback step x clip index x scenario factor.

Calculation breakdown

🛠Outrigger pole and clip data

15 ft aluminum

Typical clips2
Base clearance3-4 ft
Tip clearance1-1.5 ft
Best usesmall boats

18 ft aluminum

Typical clips2-3
Base clearance4-5 ft
Tip clearance1.5-2 ft
Best usemixed trolling

22 ft carbon

Typical clips3
Base clearance4.5-6 ft
Tip clearance2-2.5 ft
Best usebluewater

27 ft carbon

Typical clips4
Base clearance5-7 ft
Tip clearance2.5-3 ft
Best usewide spreads

📊Clip station reference table

Pole setup Recommended clip stations from base Typical clip gap Common lure stagger
15 ft pole, 2 clips 5 ft and 12.5-13.5 ft 7-8 ft 10-20 ft per clip
18 ft pole, 3 clips 5 ft, 10 ft, 15.5-16 ft 5-5.5 ft 15-25 ft per clip
22 ft pole, 3 clips 6 ft, 12 ft, 19.5-20 ft 6-7 ft 20-35 ft per clip
25 ft pole, 4 clips 6 ft, 11 ft, 16.5 ft, 22 ft 5-6 ft 20-40 ft per clip
27 ft pole, 4 clips 6.5 ft, 12 ft, 18 ft, 24 ft 5.5-6.5 ft 25-45 ft per clip

🎣Species and spread matching grid

Yellowfin Tuna

3 clips

Use balanced stations with the outer clip in clean water. Keep bars and chains on wider, higher stations when the wake is heavy.

Blue Marlin

3-4 clips

Longer poles and a wide-tip pattern help pull large lures outside prop wash while keeping short teasers reachable.

Sailfish

2-3 clips

Moderate clip gaps and light release pressure keep ballyhoo swimming clean with less drop-back shock on lighter leaders.

Wahoo

2 clips

High-speed sets usually favor fewer clips, extra tip clearance, and stronger releases to reduce snap-outs and line slap.

📏Geometry and release pressure reference

Outboard angle Horizontal spread effect Aft reach effect Good application
30-35 deg Narrow to moderate Long aft reach Rough water or small cockpit
40-45 deg Balanced spread Balanced aft reach General offshore trolling
48-55 deg Wide clean-water spread Shorter aft reach Tuna bars and billfish lures
56-65 deg Maximum side pull Limited aft reach Calm water, long riggers
Clip system Typical release range Best line class Distance note
Light tension clip 1-3 lb 12-30 lb Keep shorter gaps in chop
Standard release clip 3-8 lb 30-80 lb Works with 2-3 clip spreads
Roller troller 5-12 lb 50-130 lb Good for outer clean-water clips
Heavy teaser clip 8-18 lb Teaser line Use extra station clearance

💡Clip distance calculation tips

Check tip clearance: Keep the outermost clip inside the final guide or tip pulley zone. A little unused pole protects halyards from chafe and gives room for snap swivels.

Match distance to wake lanes: Clip distance sets the side spread, but lure setback sets the wake position. If two baits share one wake face, increase setback or move one clip inward.

Outrigger setup begins simply enough, most guys just go by feel, throwing their bait as far out there as they think they can get it and hoping it’s good enough. This changes when you find yourself beating on blue water and every inch of spread make all the difference between running your lure clean or tangling it up in the prop wash. The calculator above handles the math for you. It turns pole length, base clearance, and the number of clips into precise station distances to ensure your baits stays separated and effective. Let the trigonometry work itself out while you concentrate on fish.

The first limitation you’ll encounter involves pole length. A fifteen-foot aluminum pole on a center console has different physics than a twenty-seven-foot carbon rig on a sportfisher. Since the pole bases is so close to the antennas and hardtop supports, the short poles requires more care in how they are rigged. Before you begin putting out clips, you want an initial clear space, typically four to six feet away from the hinge, where your lines can be protected. If you put a clip any closer to the base, it risks snagging when turning into position. This is where the tool come into play as it subtracts whatever clearance you define at the base so it can calculate how much usable run you have for clips.

How to Set Up Your Outriggers

Using two clips is simple, but there isn’t as much coverage. Using four is wider and covers more water, but they has to be precisely spaced so they don’t cross over each other. The more release points you have the smaller the gap becomes in between. This is where the number of stations you ask for impacts average gap. You might assume equal spacing is best. However, you will find that widening your gap to the tip keeps your outer lures farther away from the wake turbulence caused by the hull. And that’s why you can select whether you want equal spacing (default) or a wider-tip pattern that matches your trolling style.

Pole length isn’t the only factor; how they project from the boat is equally important. With a 45 degree outboard angle, the spread is well-balanced and good for general offshore trolling. Opening up that angle to 55 degrees will push the lures further out into clean water, but it also make the rear reach shorter (baits are closer to the stern). For better bait action behind the boat, such as in rougher conditions where you need to see what’s going on with the tackle, narrow the angle.

Pole elevation angle is another consideration. Raising the pole higher puts more tension on the halyard release mechanism, but less drag on the line itself. The last element to this puzzle is lure stagger. Your clips might be spaced out well side-to-side. However, when running multiple baits in the same wake lane, they may be too close to the boat and still crash into each other. By staggering your lures by twenty to forty feet, you ensure each bait sits in its own distinct location within the churn of water left behind the hull. Whether you are fishing for marlin with long-line teasers or tuna with high-speed bars, your setup will include a suggested staggered lure pattern. This pattern works in both side-to-side and front-to-back directions to avoid tangles and represent a school of prey more naturaly.

Knowing what goes into the tool makes it easy to adjust as conditions dictate. It has tighter spacing on the inside and a shorter reach from the back in rough water. It provides deeper presentation and a wider spread in clean calm seas. It offers typical ranges for common pole sizes as a starting point (see the data in the tool), but then you can tweak the variables to refine your set up. Adjust the margin for the swivel and knot to give yourself some cushion so you don’t run out of line tying off your releases. But it all balances out in the end. Too much spread will be too much drag on the outrigger arms as well as being too much for the structure of your boat. Not enough spread causes prop wash, but stretching it too far risks creating excessive drag on the outrigger arms or exceeding your boat’s structural limits. When you know what your constraints are, the math is simple. Enter your pole lengths and how many clips you want to use and let it do the work for you. No more guessing at rigging and no more second-guessing when those bites start firing off.

As you head back in, evaluate how each of those lures fared based off where they were positioned. Did the outer bait run cleaner then the inner one? Was there enough gap between the third and second clip? Use this information to adjust your stagger distance or base clearance for future trips. Experience fine tunes what the numbers tell us. Begin by using the calculated stations. Make adjustments on the water if necessary. You will discover your perfect spread quicker than through trial and error, you should of seen it sooner.

Outrigger Clip Distance Calculator

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