G'day Ozscott - another light tackle fanatic here!
I've experimented with dozens of lines, reels and rods, as I'm pretty much landbased these days, and always striving to maximise casting distance with ultralite softies. I primarily chase bream, trevally and flatties. My line of choice atm, is WTF Gliss - in 8 and 13lb strains. Not yet too sure what it actually breaks at, but haven't yet popped a fish through the rod - so I'll stick with it.
Very, very, slippery, and casts extremely well with lighter jigheads. As yet...no windknots or guidewraps - something I've found repeatedly with sunline, powerpro and many others. They're probably very good lines when using a little more weight on the end, but for 1-3gms? Nope. I like the green for stealth, and the white or yellow for hi visibility usage.
I generally use 6/8lb fluoro, with an fg knot with 26 wraps. Landbased, I need a little extra insurance! Have yet to experience one letting go. You'll find the fg on many websites, including this one. It's a bugger to learn, and tie correctly, but after 20-30 attempts, you get the hang of it, and can do it pretty easily. I sat down one afternoon with some spare spools of line, and persevered until I had it. I attach the jighead via a uni knot, and whilst purists will tell you that a loop knot is imperative, the fish don't seem to know that, and still happily chomp down on my lures!
My rod and reel of choice for this? A Daiwa Freams 2004, and a Crucis Aegis 7'8", 1-3kg rod. Absolutely superb. I'd also suggest that whilst your Sedona is more than adequate, you'll probably want to look at a longer rod - 7ft+ will give you a much greater casting distance.
Regards,
Rob.