That's the biggest reason I tried going back to braid one more time. Normally I hate and detest braid, and I'd never use it. But with the cold air settling in, my mono (15 lb. Big Game) was reacting like romex. That's not good. I met a guy fishing who was outcasting me by a good bit (unusual) and having real good luck; no backlashes and consistent accuracy. We got to talking, and he was using braid - 65 lb. Powerpro. He said that it was the only braid he used, that he'd had the same problems I had had with smaller diameter braid, and that I should try the 65 lb. size.
So I did. And in cold air (below 40 degrees) it outcast mono by a great degree. But that 65 lb. Powerpro was a LOT noisier than the 40 that I had used before. So that's why I asked the question here.
Thinking back on the fish that I caught, I think I agree with this. I'd put it a little different, though. I caught the most fish on twitched spoons (Silver Minnow and Dardevle) and only one on a white spinnerbait. So I'd say it like this:
Braid transmits vibration through the water more and more as your line tension increases from resistive lures.
And that fits in with what I noticed; the noise increased dramatically when I used tight-line steady retrieves, and at the same time, that's when the bite dropped way off. When I used stop-and-go retrieves, I had much better luck.
There were other fishermen within sight, too. They were catching consistently when my results were inconsistent. They were using mono. That's what really started me thinking about this whole noise thing. If I would have had the exact same results as what they had, I'd never have cared. But I didn't.
I'm going to have to think about this. Don't know what I'll do. I think I'll continue using the braid until ice-up, but I'm going to watch my results versus other peoples' results reeeeeal careful.
THANKS, EVERYONE! ? jj