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why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
Todd Copeland wrote: "duty-honor-country" wrote in message ups.com... Carlos wrote: Accuracy and the ability to control the entry of a bait into the water. Sometime watch, really watch guys on tv casting. Or even better, go to a wintertime fishing show where a big name angler is tossing a jig into a cup 50-80 feet away and never missing. Doing it while not making a lot of noise. Just laying it in there. Baitcasters are far more useful, and accurate than you give them credit for. They take practice. Anything worthwhile does. I've been fishing for 37 years now, and to say a baitcaster is more accurate, is very misleading- and downright incorrect. I can put 6 pound test on an open face and cast 200 feet with ease. And I can put 10 pound test on it and haul in huge bass. And I've fished small streams and creeks with open faced spinning reels, that require far more precision than any baitcaster can give- and would leave a baitcasting reel in a birdsnest tangle. Caros mentioned that baitcasters were more _accurate", not that they could throw a lure further as you keep mentioning. Spinning reels _are_ good for distance and for using light lures. But baitcaster win hands down for accuracy. There are very few times (really none) that anyone should want to throw a lure 100-200 feet (by the way, the over-hand throw on a 200 foot cast has _got_ to be scary!) You mentioned backlashes on a baitcaster and that you've been fishing for 37 years. If you're getting backlashes then you've not fished long enough with a baitcast to appreciate how well it does. I've been fishing, steady, for about 10 years and use baitcasters 80% of the time. Out of the past thousands of casts I'd say I've only had backlash once... and it only took 5 seconds to clear. The only way to control the line on a spinning reel is to apply slight pressure against the line with your finger once each time the line wraps around the spool. As you mentioned, on a baitcaster you just need to drag your thumb across the spool as the line is going out. From your posts it really seems like you are no open to accept the fact that baitcasters _are_ more accurate then spinning reels. If they were not, why do all professional bass fisherman use them 80%-90% of the time? I guess they _all_ could be wrong about the subject. Something you don't mention is what _kind_ of bass fishing you do. If you just need to throw a shiner out into the middle of the lake, then a spinning reel would work best for your needs. But if you want to throw that plastic worm or spinning lure right into that 6"x6" hole of lily pads four or five times, then you might want to consider practicing with a baitcaster. You bring up valid points- but to repeat what a previous poster gleaned from my posts- why use 20 pound test and a heavy lure, to catch an 8 pound fish ? And the added headaches of a baitcaster added to it. It seems that same lure could be presented with a stout open faced reel and rod, and horsed in just as easily. They use open faced reels for deep sea fishing too- so obviously the new ones have the gusto to horse a big fish in as well. Correct ? Keep in mind professional bass fishermen get a lot of sponsor money. I've yet to try to make a cast that I could not make with a spinning reel. Where's the accuracy problem ? I've fished streams where the target area is 2 feet square- and anywhere else is a snag and lost hook/bait. If that's not an accuracy challenge, what is ? I agree that for pulling a lure through lilly pads and stumps, a baitcaster has the leverage advantage. But what average guy would fish that area, every time ? Sooner or later, one tires of the obstacles and snags. You may not break the line, but you may have to go up and unsnag it often. If there was a place where all of the fish caught were over 10 pounds, sure I'd use a bait caster. But the baitcaster aura is reminding me of a street car with a 6-71 supercharger sticking through the hood, that can't get out of it's own way. |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
WARREN WOLK wrote: He sounds like a shiner guy to me, and he needs a new yardstick too. Hundreds of feet, lmao... Warren "Todd Copeland" wrote in message k.net... "duty-honor-country" wrote in message ups.com... Carlos wrote: Accuracy and the ability to control the entry of a bait into the water. Sometime watch, really watch guys on tv casting. Or even better, go to a wintertime fishing show where a big name angler is tossing a jig into a cup 50-80 feet away and never missing. Doing it while not making a lot of noise. Just laying it in there. Baitcasters are far more useful, and accurate than you give them credit for. They take practice. Anything worthwhile does. I've been fishing for 37 years now, and to say a baitcaster is more accurate, is very misleading- and downright incorrect. I can put 6 pound test on an open face and cast 200 feet with ease. And I can put 10 pound test on it and haul in huge bass. And I've fished small streams and creeks with open faced spinning reels, that require far more precision than any baitcaster can give- and would leave a baitcasting reel in a birdsnest tangle. Caros mentioned that baitcasters were more _accurate", not that they could throw a lure further as you keep mentioning. Spinning reels _are_ good for distance and for using light lures. But baitcaster win hands down for accuracy. There are very few times (really none) that anyone should want to throw a lure 100-200 feet (by the way, the over-hand throw on a 200 foot cast has _got_ to be scary!) You mentioned backlashes on a baitcaster and that you've been fishing for 37 years. If you're getting backlashes then you've not fished long enough with a baitcast to appreciate how well it does. I've been fishing, steady, for about 10 years and use baitcasters 80% of the time. Out of the past thousands of casts I'd say I've only had backlash once... and it only took 5 seconds to clear. The only way to control the line on a spinning reel is to apply slight pressure against the line with your finger once each time the line wraps around the spool. As you mentioned, on a baitcaster you just need to drag your thumb across the spool as the line is going out. From your posts it really seems like you are no open to accept the fact that baitcasters _are_ more accurate then spinning reels. If they were not, why do all professional bass fisherman use them 80%-90% of the time? I guess they _all_ could be wrong about the subject. Something you don't mention is what _kind_ of bass fishing you do. If you just need to throw a shiner out into the middle of the lake, then a spinning reel would work best for your needs. But if you want to throw that plastic worm or spinning lure right into that 6"x6" hole of lily pads four or five times, then you might want to consider practicing with a baitcaster. Who are you trying to kid ? Now all of a sudden, a spinning rod can't cast 200 feet ? Wake up and smell the coffee. Put a full spool light line on a good long spinning rod, with a heavy bottom weight- and try it one time. 200 feet casts no problem. Want to go that far heavier line, you say ?? just add weight and keep the spool topped off. |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
"duty-honor-country" wrote in message ups.com... question- considering the incessant amount of tangles and backlashes with ANY bait casting reel, and the fact your thumb must ride the spool at all times to (try to) prevent it- why would anyone bother even using a bait casting reel for fresh water fishing ? I can see the cranking advantage to a bait caster, for hauling in huge fish, and dragging lures through weeds, etc.. But in my actual experience, the bait casters can't cast as far, and not as accurately, as a cheap open face spinning reel or even a spincasting reel. Short answer: They do work, if you learn how to use them. Open-faced spinning real more accurate than baitcasters? Not in the hands of an experinced baitcaster user. I bet you don't sit a 5 gallon pale out in the yard and practice casting to it at all, with any reel, do you? If not, you are not the target market for baitcasters. Your methods are too casual, you don't want to practice you just want to fish. Be that the case, then sure, stick with spinning reels and closed spinning reels like the Zebco 33. I live and die by the baitcaster, they outnumber the spinning reels on my boat 6-2. And I keep those 2 spinning reels on there for 2-3 purposes: Certain extra-light weight baits that I use, very windy conditions, and for times when non-experienced anglers are going to be on-board and in need of fishing rods. And your technique needs some help. You aren't required to keep your thumb on the spool all the time. You won't get any distance with that much friction on the spool. The key to casting a baitcaster, consistently and without hassle IMO, is your casting technique. That's what ultimately sets and controls the bait's speed, which is what is the root of most overruns. Too much bait speed at the get-go. Think of it in gun-like terms, you don't necessarily want a really high muzzle velocity, but you do want a nice consistent down-range velocity after the launch. A lot of this comes from the casting wrist & arm, not the casting thumb. When I go fishing, I want to fish, not untangle the reel ever 4th cast. Again, it takes practice. You get a backlash every 4 casts, I get one every 4-5 trips, usually when I tried to skip a bait under a distant dock and hit the dock by mistake. Of course, I have fished baitcasters since I was 8-9 years old (and am currently pushing 40), and I tune mine up each season, and spend hours in the yard casting to small pales, at different distances, and don't stop "tuning" my reels until I can use the bait I want, and hit the pales dead center, 9 out of every 10 casts, using whatever cast I want to practice: overhead, sidearm (fore and backhand), flipping and pitching. Are the 5-ball bearing bait casters so much better they don't tangle, over a single-ball bearing bait caster ? Common sense tells me no. Experience tells me yes. You have to tune a baitcaster to your casting habits (do you wrist or arm cast? what are your magnet settings, reel/spool tension, line type and weight?), and extra bearings in a baitcaster make it more smooth, easier to tune, and way easier to cast accurately once you have it tuned to your tendencies, bait choices, and weather conditions. These bait casters seem at best something to use, to toss bait a few feet from the boat, then troll in the ocean or large lakes for huge fish- NOT for casting with precision and distance. I can cast hundreds of feet with my spinning reel- and hardly 100 feet with a bait caster with a lug nut attached for weight. This tells me that you haven't given a baitcaster a fair chance. I personally, don't tune my baitcasters with lug nuts. And IMO, not many freshwater sized baitcasters are even setup for the 2-4 ounces that a typical lug nut surely weighs. Penn Senator salt water baitcasters? Maybe. I have fished 32 oz Mojos off those for striped bass.... I'm getting the notion the reel industry is doing a lot of bs-ing to sell bait casters. No, they market harder to use and control reels to fisherman that want the most accuracy that they can achieve with them with a little practice. Do you golf at all? How well do you golf without practicing with your current clubs? Fishing is the same way when it comes to equipment above the entry level stuff. Based on your post, I'd say if you DO golf, that you do it with off-the-shelf equipment, that wasn't "fitted" to you and you wonder why you can't get rid of that slice, right? Go get your clubs bent to fit your height and stance and arm length and I promise you'll shave 5 strokes off your next round.....Put in some practice with a baitcaster - and get it tuned to your style - and you'll wonder how you ever lived without them. skeptic bordering on cynic... |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater?
duty-honor-country wrote:
question- considering the incessant amount of tangles and backlashes with ANY bait casting reel, You are blaming your own shortcomings on the hardware. Sad. |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
DHC wrote-- FWIW, I could buy the best rod and reel made on the planet today- and it would be like pocket change to me. But I have a funny feeling it would give only slightly better results. These baitcasters obviously need very heavy lures and line to make them cast with minimal hassle. I just don't see the advantage in a lake where the biggest fish is a 6 or 8 pound bass. My spinning reel will take that no problem. .. Hookesets are better IMO, accuracy and distance all improve when I'm using a baitcaster. I also think I can work baits better with a baitcaster. I can put baits in places that I'm unable to do with a spinning set up, and backlash's are limited when you learn to use the tools properly. JMO |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
RichZ wrote: duty-honor-country wrote: question- considering the incessant amount of tangles and backlashes with ANY bait casting reel, You are blaming your own shortcomings on the hardware. Sad. I tried to learn to use a baitcaster but spent too much time unraveling the rats nest tangles in the reel. I use a spinning reel on a medium action rod for virtually everything I fish for. |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
Alwaysfishking wrote: DHC wrote-- FWIW, I could buy the best rod and reel made on the planet today- and it would be like pocket change to me. But I have a funny feeling it would give only slightly better results. These baitcasters obviously need very heavy lures and line to make them cast with minimal hassle. I just don't see the advantage in a lake where the biggest fish is a 6 or 8 pound bass. My spinning reel will take that no problem. . Hookesets are better IMO, accuracy and distance all improve when I'm using a baitcaster. I also think I can work baits better with a baitcaster. I can put baits in places that I'm unable to do with a spinning set up, and backlash's are limited when you learn to use the tools properly. JMO thanks for the honest, non-flame answer. We just came back today from another hour and a half fishing nearby, using the baitcasting reel. I did notice that hits are easier to detect for some reason with it. I now have 15 lb. test on it and caught 8 panfish just now, using nightwalkers and a bottom weight. There's a few large catfish there that we can see, but could not hook one. Released all the fish- the casting is getting better and further. For comparison I brought along my spinning rig with a wooden plug- still able to cast much further with the spinning reel and more accurately. |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
RichZ wrote: duty-honor-country wrote: question- considering the incessant amount of tangles and backlashes with ANY bait casting reel, You are blaming your own shortcomings on the hardware. Sad. you are blaming another person for your hardware preferences- that's what's even sadder. |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater ?
On 7 Aug 2006 14:22:26 -0700, "duty-honor-country"
wrote: Who are you trying to kid ? Now all of a sudden, a spinning rod can't cast 200 feet ? Wake up and smell the coffee. Put a full spool light line on a good long spinning rod, with a heavy bottom weight- and try it one time. 200 feet casts no problem. Want to go that far heavier line, you say ?? just add weight and keep the spool topped off. Lets battle! I'll grab my Scorpion spooled w/ 20lb PowerPro, you get your contraption and I'll trip trap to whatever bridge you live under and we can go at it with nice simple 5" Senkos for distance. Accuracy count yes or no? .. Harry J aka Thundercat Share the knowledge, compete on execution... http://www.brooklynbillstackleshop.com http://secretweaponlures.com |
why would anyone bother with a baitcasting reel for freshwater?
duty-honor-country wrote:
RichZ wrote: duty-honor-country wrote: question- considering the incessant amount of tangles and backlashes with ANY bait casting reel, You are blaming your own shortcomings on the hardware. Sad. you are blaming another person for your hardware preferences- that's what's even sadder. ??? I'm not blaming anyone for anything. I didn't comment on your preference for spinning tackle, just your insistence that backlashes and tangles are unavoidable and 'incessant' with casting tackle -- a position that just isn't accurate. You seem to think it is, which reflects only on your your abilities with the tackle, not on the design of the tackle itself. There is no denying that casting tackle requires a more skilled and practiced hand to cast. The lighter the weight being cast, the broader the gap in how much skill is needed to do it with casting tackle rather than spinning gear. You apparently haven't developed that skill, and are blaming the tackle. Then again, you might be trying to learn with a piece of junk, and it really IS the tackle. I prefer spinning tackle for any application in which I use 6 lb test or lower. Since drop shotting is among my favorite techniques, and I pretty much wrote the book (or at least the article in In-Fisherman magazine years ago) on light tackle jig & worm fishing, most days I use spinning gear as much as, or more than casting tackle. But as soon as I go heavier than that, casting gear gets the nod. It's more comfortable, and in sizes suitable for handling heavy line, much lighter. Also, in pure mechanical engineering terms, a casting reel is a more elegant and efficient machine for retrieving the line. Spinning gear takes the line around an awkward right angle turn on the retrieve, and that turn puts pressure at a right angle to the bearing on which the rotor rotates, trying to cock the rotor whenever it is pulling weight around that awful corner. Further, the spinning reel asks you to set into motion a large rotor and bail, instead of a comparatively small spool to wind the line. The rotor/roller/bail assembly is an out of balance, rotating mass -- something they taught us to avoid when I studied mechanical design. If it wasn't such a good design for a reel's other function (paying out line) it would be tough to even justify the existence of a spinning reel. But because it does such a good job with that half of its responsibilities -- particularly when light line and light weights are involved -- I find it to be worth putting up with its poor design for the other half of its job, but only in specific circumstances. I really don't care what kind of tackle you or anyone else prefers. I know lots of anglers who don't have the ambition, dexterity or resolve to learn to use a bait casting reel with any amount of confidence and grace. I happily share my boat with several 'spinning gear only' anglers. I'd much rather they concentrate on the important parts of fishing -- finding fish and forcing them or tricking them into biting something artificial -- than on trying to master tackle that they're uncomfortable with for no reason other than that's what some pro uses. As long as they're not doing something dumb like trying to fish in heavy cover with 6 or 8 pound test because that's all that really fishes well on their light spinning gear, more power to them. And to you. |
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