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Spinning setup
Bob wrote:
The old & renouned Zebco/Abu Cardinal series spinning reels all had rear drags, and theirs was as good as any I ever saw. I never could figure out what all the fuss was about those reels. They didn't feel particularly smooth to me. but then again, they didn't have a reversible handle and were not available with the crank on the right side, so I couldn't use one anyway. |
Spinning setup
No skirted spool, no instant anti-reverse, no silent anti reverse, no
big anti twist line roller. no bad for a 70's reel. no good fror 2004.JMO |
Spinning setup
See a.b.p.f. for two rear drag models. I fished with the Symetre model for
a couple years and loved it. But it does have one plastic gear that cannot take the pressure of catching a day of hawgs. Caught about 10 smallies in about a two hour span that weighed 5+ pounds and that plastic gear melted down, striped out, skipped a half gear, doesn't matter, I had another nice fish on and I had to hand line it in, because my reel took a crap. -- Craig Baugher Be Confident, Focused, but most of all Have FUN! |
Spinning setup
I have the shimano spirex (1000, 2000, 4000) rear drag. I like the reels on
account of the drag adjustment and the trigger system. I fish in cold weather in the spring and fall and can where gloves and cast with the trigger system. I have a new daiwa tournament quality reel but i haven't broken it's cherry yet. |
Spinning setup
I hear ya Craig! I still love all three of my Symetre 1000s, they are front
drag. Sweeet reeels! Mine have too many 4#rs on each of them and still are sssmmmoooottthhh! Clients use them and they take quite a lot of punishment. -- Stony "Craig Baugher" wrote in message news:Fdmuc.19169$4A6.1532@attbi_s52... See a.b.p.f. for two rear drag models. I fished with the Symetre model for a couple years and loved it. But it does have one plastic gear that cannot take the pressure of catching a day of hawgs. Caught about 10 smallies in about a two hour span that weighed 5+ pounds and that plastic gear melted down, striped out, skipped a half gear, doesn't matter, I had another nice fish on and I had to hand line it in, because my reel took a crap. -- Craig Baugher Be Confident, Focused, but most of all Have FUN! --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.692 / Virus Database: 453 - Release Date: 5/28/04 |
Spinning setup
But using one on the water was a dream!
-- Bob Rickard (AKA Dr. Spinnerbait) www.secretweaponlures.com --------------------------=x O'))) "AJH" wrote in message ... No skirted spool, no instant anti-reverse, no silent anti reverse, no big anti twist line roller. no bad for a 70's reel. no good fror 2004.JMO |
Spinning setup
Yah, but if you come fishing with me on the wrong day with nightcrawlers:
"AJH" wrote in message ... No skirted spool, The skirted spool was a good idea back when to many fishing lines were much stiffer than today and would try to unwind themselves. I can remember when Trilene XL first hit the market, nobody wanted to believe that any fishing line could be that limp! And before that, we all thought that Trilene (Blue) and Royal Bonnyl (Brown) were limp lines. no instant anti-reverse, no silent anti reverse, no I own 3 reels of various makes, purchased within the last 4 years, that I have removed the anti-reverse from AND have cranked down the drag so tight that you have no recourse except that you have to back pedal when you get a biggun' on that wants to take off on you. big anti twist line roller. no bad for a 70's reel. no good fror 2004.JMO If you back pedal, then you cannot ever twist your line. What wants to cause line twist is the way line comes off the reel when the drag slips and the bail stays put, or even worse gets wound forward at the same time. FYI; I own 8 spinning reels that are as the designer/engineer wanted them, drag, anti-reverse and anti-twist rollers. They have their place for most fishing and will work wonders. Cast far Bob |
Spinning setup
I have one I inherited when my dad died. He was right handed but this is a
lefty spinning reel. Not only does the crank mount on either side, the bail spins the opposite direction of every other spinning reel I've seen, clockwise. When I got it the spool was empty so I took it over to Ray's and had them put some line on it and when I tried to use it the line was on backwards. It's a true lefty spinning reel by design. It's an Abu Cardinal and it's in killer shape, I don't know if it was ever really used but I can't fish with it. The bail thing drives me nuts, I don't know how you lefty's do it. Rich P "RichZ" wrote in message ... Bob wrote: The old & renouned Zebco/Abu Cardinal series spinning reels all had rear drags, and theirs was as good as any I ever saw. I never could figure out what all the fuss was about those reels. They didn't feel particularly smooth to me. but then again, they didn't have a reversible handle and were not available with the crank on the right side, so I couldn't use one anyway. |
Spinning setup
AJH wrote in message ... No skirted spool, no instant anti-reverse, no silent anti reverse, no big anti twist line roller. no bad for a 70's reel. no good fror 2004.JMO I have a model 3 and a 4. The non-skirted spools were never a problem. The non-silent anti-reverse is a major annoyance. The 3 is a terrible line-twister, while the 4 never gave me a line problem. Unfortunately, some of today's reels with the vaunted anti-twist line rollers have worse twist than some reels without an anti-twist feature. Other than the twist on the 3, the only problem using these Cardinals today is fishing with the anti-reverse disengaged; that backfires on me every once in a while. Nevertheless, I never quite understood why these reels had a cult-like following. |
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