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I’ve had enough bags lost by the airlines that I’d never risk reels in them. Never had them lift an eyebrow at reels and lines. When I traveled for work I used to ship gear via FedEx a few days before to either the hotel or the local shipper office. Never had FedEx lose a package, maybeThey tried to confiscate a reel from me around 10yrs ago with a sinking line saying it wasn't allowed on board. I was able to check my entire reel bag thankfully. That's why I check reels now.
I used to travel and teach life support equipment service back in the day...I forgot to pack one of my torque wrenches in the Pelican cases I shipped to location, so threw it in my backpack...they made me check it in...to my disbelief (and this was pre 9/11)...but no problem with a bunch of very sharp pencils or spare guitar strings...I’ve had enough bags lost by the airlines that I’d never risk reels in them. Never had them lift an eyebrow at reels and lines. When I traveled for work I used to ship gear via FedEx a few days before to either the hotel or the local shipper office. Never had FedEx lose a package, maybe
Done a deep dive since I’m sitting still for a few hours. Strange how much of this stuff is left up to the discretion when the TSA lists them as approved for carry on with a big honking green checkmark (and then says it’s also discretionary). I’d have thought we’d have more clear guidelines and less vague grey areas.
I had a tsa agent tell me my bag of spare lines and sink tips "looked like det[onation] cord"I’ve had trouble with sinking lines. I guess the tungsten coils look scary in the scanner. I now carry my reels but check my lines.
lol. No way it looks or smells like det cord. Those folks need more training.I had a tsa agent tell me my bag of spare lines and sink tips "looked like det[onation] cord"
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I think you found the right way to do it. Send your gear through with something else that looks potentially deadly as a decoy to distract them!I’m thinking that, too. They freaked right the heck out about the metal stays in the knee brace I sent through on the conveyor belt (apparently they looked like knives) but the bag before it was the one full of fly tying shit and sharp objects, and no one batted an eye at it.
Rubber hand grenade?I think you found the right way to do it. Send your gear through with something else that looks potentially deadly as a decoy to distract them!
Last time I flew they took my full size can of shaving cream but not my pocket knife. Too funny.People trying to go through the TSA checking with pocketknives is how I got 80% of my pocketknives.




I’ll pass the tying advise to my fishing buddy. The three of us took up one whole side, so the only attention he got was from a flight attendant who kept coming by to watch him.Not much help to most, but back in 2018 I was flying back from a fly tying event in New Brunswick, Canada. I wanted to pass time by tying on the plane. I brought materials for a Blue Charm.
As far as tools, all I brought in my small tying kit were cuticle nippers and hackle pliers (if confiscated, I would have been fine).
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Aside from not bringing any head cement, they allowed me to complete the fly in flight.
P.S. I tie in hand so there was no risk for a tying vise.
Please tell me this is what I think it is.personal power tools, battery operated” to help her get comfortable on a 14 hr flight. Whatever works.
That is how I've lost 80% of mine.People trying to go through the TSA checkpoint with pocketknives is how I got 80% of my pocketknives.