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Building your own fly rod questions
On Mon, 13 Aug 2007 16:21:24 -0000, BJ Conner
wrote: On Aug 13, 7:41 am, mdk77 wrote: I ran across this on the internet and wondered what the advantages and disadvantages are to building your own fly rod. Is this something the average fisherman should stay away from (too difficult)? Anyone here fish rods they built themselves? What are some recommended resources for this (books, web sites etc.). I'm a guy who is a hopeless DIY person. It's a sickness :-( and an ongoing source of ribbing from my teenage children when I try to build everything from our radio's to our furniture. They do think it's cool that I tie my own flies though. Their friends tell them they're not sure if I'm a madman or a genius (definitely a madman IMHO). Thanks in advance for the info. It's not rocket scinece. There is skill involved and it takes a little practice. Appearance of the final product is a reflection of your skill. All the rods I ahve built are ugly. I have friends who have works of art they fish with. They go for things like $50 reel seats and wrap guides in elaborate patterns with muti-colored threads. Shop the internet for components, there is a wide variety of prices. There are seconds and "surplus" balnks. Build your first rod out of cheap components. The techniques used on cheap components are the same ones you use with a $400 blank. Start lookng for a low rpm motor like the one in a washing macnie timer ( getting rare as more washers have solid state timers). Turning the rod as laquor ( epoxy etc. ) on the guides dries is important. Lumps in the finish of the guide windings is IMO the most common error. If you want a good source for a cheap turning motor, I would recommend using the motor from an old fax machine as your turning motor. I have one from the submarine (retired Navy) I used to be stationed on. It works great. Turns about 7 RPM. We had a power supply die on the fax machine while on board and I tried to fix the thing (electrician by trade) and when we realized the power supply was completely shot, stripped it for parts. I kept the motor since I saw it was perfect for turning rods or drying epoxy coated flies. If you can find an old one that somebody is throwing away, this will save you a bunch of money on a turning motor. You could also use the motor from an old printer (dot matrix works best, slower). Works just as well. Both take a little bit of ingenuityand framing to make work as a rod turning motor or as a fly drying motor, but you can get anything you need from your neighborhood hardware store. Making your own rod, even if it is ugly, is great once you get on the water with it. I made a small 7 ft 6 inch 4 weight for panfish and small brook ttrout fishing. Doesn't look great, but it is nice to catch a fish on something you created (other than the fly). Good luck in your endevour. |
Building your own fly rod questions
On Aug 24, 1:33 am, gordo wrote:
Making your own rod, even if it is ugly, is great once you get on the water with it. I made a small 7 ft 6 inch 4 weight for panfish and small brook ttrout fishing. Doesn't look great, but it is nice to catch a fish on something you created (other than the fly). Good luck in your endevour. Thanks for the help. I realize I probably won't save money building my own rod, and it may not be perfectly built, but I do like the idea of having the satisfaction of fishing something I made myself. |
Building your own fly rod questions
mdk77 wrote:
On Aug 24, 1:33 am, gordo wrote: Making your own rod, even if it is ugly, is great once you get on the water with it. I made a small 7 ft 6 inch 4 weight for panfish and small brook ttrout fishing. Doesn't look great, but it is nice to catch a fish on something you created (other than the fly). Good luck in your endevour. Thanks for the help. I realize I probably won't save money building my own rod, and it may not be perfectly built, but I do like the idea of having the satisfaction of fishing something I made myself. It really depends on how many rods you build. The first one or two might not save you much, because of the initial cost of tools, and such. Still, considering a new, high end graphite rod is getting dangerously close to $700, you can save on the very first rod you build. You can get complete rod kits for well under $200. brians |
Building your own fly rod questions
On Aug 24, 1:11 pm, briansfly wrote:
mdk77 wrote: On Aug 24, 1:33 am, gordo wrote: Making your own rod, even if it is ugly, is great once you get on the water with it. I made a small 7 ft 6 inch 4 weight for panfish and small brook ttrout fishing. Doesn't look great, but it is nice to catch a fish on something you created (other than the fly). Good luck in your endevour. Thanks for the help. I realize I probably won't save money building my own rod, and it may not be perfectly built, but I do like the idea of having the satisfaction of fishing something I made myself. It really depends on how many rods you build. The first one or two might not save you much, because of the initial cost of tools, and such. Still, considering a new, high end graphite rod is getting dangerously close to $700, you can save on the very first rod you build. You can get complete rod kits for well under $200. brians I like the idea that I can build the rod with the exact components that are important to me. If I would be able to save a bit of money too, then all the better.....but I'm not doing this for the savings. And as I said in the earlier post, it will give me satisfaction to fish with a rod (and flies) that I made myself. |
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