| Gear Review: Peak Rotary Vise PRV-G2 |
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| Written by Brian Frawley |
| Wednesday, 04 January 2012 00:00 |
![]() You can't tie flies without a good vise; it's kind of the foundation of your fly tying house. So it's only fitting that the first fly tying review for this winter is on a vise. First Blush Right off the bat, the first thing that jumped out at me when I first was looking at this vise is how well built it is out of the box. It has a white powder coated base that you don't see on any other vise on the market, and that really sets the Peak apart in it's price range. The arm to rotate the jaws is smooth and the whole thing has a really nice finish. I put this vise next to my trusty Dyna-King, a vise that costs twice as much as the Peak, and found them to be fairly similar in look. ![]() The two main functions of this vise is how well it holds and locks a hook and how well it rotates. The jaws on the Peak are nice and by rotating the nut forward for larger hooks and backward for small ones it will hold a nice variety of hook sizes. The jaws are very good for tying salmon and steelhead flies that are thicker diameter sized hooks and smaller diameter trout or bass patterns. The company has as an extra purchase, midge jaws for small hooks and salt water jaws for hooks used that are bigger then 2/0. ![]() The Extras Like a car you can excesserize your your Peak Vise. I mentioned the knobs, and jaws, but there are some others that will make your tying more convenient. The thing I like is how the base has three holes in the pedestal base and some of the excessories you can add fit in the other two holes, like a light and a waste catcher (click here to see more excessories) so you can stay at the base price or spend some extra coin on some added convenience for your fly tying. (Click Here to find a Peak reseller near you) |
| Last Updated on Thursday, 05 January 2012 10:45 |