![]() |
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
daytripper wrote:
#1 recommendation: make it a five piece so you won't have to worry about getting it on and off airplanes. I have never owned a rod of more than two pieces. ( well my Dad broke one of my rods once but I am not counting that one ) I don't travel much either. I have always thought, that many connections would effect the rods action. Does it? Don't get me wrong. If I was dragging my rod on a plane I would not want it to leave my sight. Lose my pants...Fine. Lose my rod....I'm ****ed off! But what the hell do I know I have never been on a plane. But if I was going to be traveling I would buy a multi piece rod in hopes that it would be in tact when I got ???? / Home. So what do you think about multi piece vs. action. Is it noticeable? |
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
daytripper wrote:
#1 recommendation: make it a five piece so you won't have to worry about getting it on and off airplanes. I have never owned a rod of more than two pieces. ( well my Dad broke one of my rods once but I am not counting that one ) I don't travel much either. I have always thought, that many connections would effect the rods action. Does it? Don't get me wrong. If I was dragging my rod on a plane I would not want it to leave my sight. Lose my pants...Fine. Lose my rod....I'm ****ed off! But what the hell do I know I have never been on a plane. But if I was going to be traveling I would buy a multi piece rod in hopes that it would be in tact when I got ???? / Home. So what do you think about multi piece vs. action. Is it noticeable? |
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
I recommend the TFO TiCr 8wt. For the money, nohing better.
-- Stev Lenon 91B20 '68-'69 When the dawn came up like thunder http://web.tampabay.rr.com/stevglo/i...age92kword.htm |
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
I recommend the TFO TiCr 8wt. For the money, nohing better.
-- Stev Lenon 91B20 '68-'69 When the dawn came up like thunder http://web.tampabay.rr.com/stevglo/i...age92kword.htm |
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
"Peter Charles" wrote in message ... On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 13:39:13 GMT, (Goat) wrote: daytripper wrote: #1 recommendation: make it a five piece so you won't have to worry about getting it on and off airplanes. I have never owned a rod of more than two pieces. ( well my Dad broke one of my rods once but I am not counting that one ) I don't travel much either. I have always thought, that many connections would effect the rods action. Does it? Don't get me wrong. If I was dragging my rod on a plane I would not want it to leave my sight. Lose my pants...Fine. Lose my rod....I'm ****ed off! But what the hell do I know I have never been on a plane. But if I was going to be traveling I would buy a multi piece rod in hopes that it would be in tact when I got ???? / Home. So what do you think about multi piece vs. action. Is it noticeable? Currently have 17 rods (I think) and only one is two piece -- it's bamboo. The rest range from three to seven. If the ferrules are well made, then you won't notice any performance degredation. Though some people don't like them, spigot ferrules are the best for travel rods. They don't create flat spots in the blank -- important when there are as many as six joints. My cheap Caeblas Stowaway 7 is one of the best six weights I've owned - seven pieces and spigot ferruled. Spigots cost more to make plus some less knowledgeable members of the fishing public wreck their first spigot ferruled rod by tyring to force the ends of the blanks to meet. One fellow on another board has apparently wrecked his brand new, $600+ USD, spigot ferruled, spey rod by jamming the sections together so tight (in order to make the blank ends meet) that he had to use pliers to pull the sections apart. Put these two aspects together and it's understandable why many manufacturers steer away from them. However, you'll find some premium rod companies stick by them -- Hardy, Winston, Scott, CND, even Daiwa of Scotland produces it's Whisker line with spigots. Peter turn mailhot into hotmail to reply Visit The Streamer Page at http://www.mountaincable.net/~pcharl...ers/index.html |
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
|
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
|
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
Peter Charles wrote:
Though some people don't like them, spigot ferrules are the best for travel rods. They don't create flat spots in the blank -- important when there are as many as six joints. My cheap Caeblas Stowaway 7 is one of the best six weights I've owned - seven pieces and spigot ferruled. I got the idea somewhere that Cabela's 7-piece rods have switched and no long have spigot ferrules. Is that true? I like spigot ferrules but think that for rods with 5 or more joints the very thin spigots connecting the top-most pieces are overly delicate. I broke the top spigot three times on an otherwise wonderful 7-piece Hardy Stowaway 6wt. To much trouble. Traded it away. JR (who kinda misses that rod) |
New Fly Rod 8 Weight Recommendations
Peter Charles wrote:
Though some people don't like them, spigot ferrules are the best for travel rods. They don't create flat spots in the blank -- important when there are as many as six joints. My cheap Caeblas Stowaway 7 is one of the best six weights I've owned - seven pieces and spigot ferruled. I got the idea somewhere that Cabela's 7-piece rods have switched and no long have spigot ferrules. Is that true? I like spigot ferrules but think that for rods with 5 or more joints the very thin spigots connecting the top-most pieces are overly delicate. I broke the top spigot three times on an otherwise wonderful 7-piece Hardy Stowaway 6wt. To much trouble. Traded it away. JR (who kinda misses that rod) |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:06 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter