The product recommendations on our site are independently chosen by our editors. When you click through our links, we may earn a commission.
Just like other double line knots, this is just a variation of its name sake with your line doubled before beginning to tie the knot.
Start just like a regular Jam knot, except double your line first. We usually pinch the line where we double it leaving several inches of tag and doubled line to work with on these knots.
To Tie:
1. Double the line and pass it through the eyelet, allowing yourself several inches of doubled line on either side of the knot.
2. Run the doubled tag parallel to the doubled mainline section and pinch it together about an inch or two above the eyelet.
3. Begin wrapping around down the 4 lines 5-7 times.
4. When you get to the bottom pass the doubled line between the two doubled lines at the bottom (should be an opening there).
5. Bring the tag end up through to loop created when you started wrapping down.
6. Moisten the lines and pull the loop, tag and mainline all together to tighten the knot.
Notes:
You can pull the loop to tighten the wraps and pull the tag and mainline together to tighten the knot against the eyelet. Again it’s a lot of line to manage. The key is learning how to the pinch the lines together and hold them with two fingers while you wrap with other fingers. If a lure weighs enough you will see some anglers swing the wraps around the lure in a circle fashion.
Currently working as Senior Advisor to Wired2fish. Former COO and Publisher, Jason Sealock came to Wired2fish shortly after inception in January of 2010. Prior to that he was the Editor-in-Chief of FLW Outdoors Magazines. He worked up from Associate Editor to Photo Editor and finally Editor in Chief of three magazines FLW Bass, FLW Walleye and FLW Saltwater. He set the content direction for Wired2fish while also working directly with programmers, consultants and industry partners.
Sealock has been an avid angler for the better part of 40 years and has been writing and shooting fishing and outdoors content for more than 25 years. He is an expert with fishing electronics and technologies and an accomplished angler, photographer, writer and editor. He has taught a lot of people to find fish with their electronics and has been instrumental in teaching these technologies to the masses. He's also the industry authority on new fishing tackle and has personally reviewed more than 10,000 products in his tenure.
He has a 30-year background in information technologies and was a certified engineer for a time in Microsoft, Novell, Cisco, and HP.
He mostly fishes for bass and panfish around the house. He has, however, caught fish in 42 of the 50 states in the US as well as Costa Rica, Mexico, and Canada and hopes to soon add Finland, Japan, Africa and Australia to his list.