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First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
Hello,
I recently purchased my first fly rod, a 5wt 4 piece. Now I need to find a reasonably priced reel to go with it. Most of my fishing will be for trout on small to medium sized streams in the Pacific Northwest. There will also be the occasional lake and pond fishing for trout and bass. My questions a 1.) What is a good reel for a college student on very limited budget? I'd like to keep the price of the reel under $50. I see alot of pflueger reels priced inexpensively($30). I've also seen A redington in my price range. I plan on upgrading at some point, so I can have a back up rod or one for friends to use. My main concern is to be able to some serious fishing from now until winter. 2) Do I need a large arbor reel? Would you mind explaining what that is? 3) I've read that a good quality line is more important than the reel, is this true? What would be a good line? I can probably drop another 40-50 bucks on this. 4) Which type of line would you reccomend? Weight Forward or a double taper. Thanks for reading all of this and thanks in Advance for any responses, Dwayne |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
Erratic Grouse wrote:
Hello, I recently purchased my first fly rod, a 5wt 4 piece. Now I need to find a reasonably priced reel to go with it. Most of my fishing will be for trout on small to medium sized streams in the Pacific Northwest. There will also be the occasional lake and pond fishing for trout and bass. My questions a 1.) What is a good reel for a college student on very limited budget? I'd like to keep the price of the reel under $50. I see alot of pflueger reels priced inexpensively($30). I've also seen A redington in my price range. I plan on upgrading at some point, so I can have a back up rod or one for friends to use. My main concern is to be able to some serious fishing from now until winter. Take a look at the Okuma Sierra reels. I own three of them and have been very pleased with them. 2) Do I need a large arbor reel? Would you mind explaining what that is? I've never used one. 3) I've read that a good quality line is more important than the reel, is this true? IMO, yes. Almost everything is more important than the reel. About all the reel does is hold your line. What would be a good line? I can probably drop another 40-50 bucks on this. 4) Which type of line would you reccomend? Weight Forward or a double taper. Are you trying to cause trouble? ;-) I prefer to DT. When one end wears out you can turn it around and use the other end. Two lines for the price of one. I'm cheap. (You can always cut it in half, too.) Thanks for reading all of this and thanks in Advance for any responses, No problem. HTH. Russell |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
"Erratic Grouse" wrote in message ups.com... Hello, I recently purchased my first fly rod, a 5wt 4 piece. Now I need to find a reasonably priced reel to go with it. Most of my fishing will be for trout on small to medium sized streams in the Pacific Northwest. There will also be the occasional lake and pond fishing for trout and bass. My questions a 1.) What is a good reel for a college student on very limited budget? I'd like to keep the price of the reel under $50. I see alot of pflueger reels priced inexpensively($30). I've also seen A redington in my price range. I plan on upgrading at some point, so I can have a back up rod or one for friends to use. My main concern is to be able to some serious fishing from now until winter. 2) Do I need a large arbor reel? Would you mind explaining what that is? 3) I've read that a good quality line is more important than the reel, is this true? What would be a good line? I can probably drop another 40-50 bucks on this. 4) Which type of line would you reccomend? Weight Forward or a double taper. Well, all of the experts (and many of them really are) seem to be busy elsewhere at the moment, so I'll give you a couple of idaes as a warmup. A disc drag mechanism is a good thing to have on a fly rell.....not absolutely necessary for small to medium trout, but good nevertheless. And you never know when you're going to run into something bigger, right? Okuma used to put out a reel they called "Sierra" for about what you're looking to pay. Don't know if they still make it, but it or something comparable would do you well. A large arbor reel is one on which the minimum diameter of the spool that the line gets wound on is much greater than that of the standard reels, say, roughly two to four inches as compared to less than an inch. Pi x diameter says the large arbor will spool up line a LOT faster. Again, not necessary. But, it doesn't hurt, either. Weight forward vs. double tapered is an eternal and eternally silly debate. It really doesn't matter. Can't help you with brand or model selection. Thanks for reading all of this and thanks in Advance for any responses, You're welcome. You'll get a lot of other opinions. Take none of them too seriously. Fly fishing, like anything else is something that you will like.....or you won't. Absent some truly bad luck or decision making (I mean phenomenally bad!) gear selection as a newby will have little to do with it. Learn to do whatever the equipment you choose will allow you to do and you can't go wrong. Oh, and don't be surprised if this discussion goes off on a bit of a tangent........it's been known to happen. :) Good luck. Wolfgang |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
Wolfgang wrote:
know when you're going to run into something bigger, right? Okuma used to put out a reel they called "Sierra" for about what you're looking to pay. Don't know if they still make it, but it or something comparable would do you well. http://www.okumafishing.com/products...rra/sierra.htm |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
"Erratic Grouse" wrote in message ups.com... Hello, I recently purchased my first fly rod, a 5wt 4 piece. Now I need to find a reasonably priced reel to go with it. Most of my fishing will be for trout on small to medium sized streams in the Pacific Northwest. There will also be the occasional lake and pond fishing for trout and bass. My questions a 1.) What is a good reel for a college student on very limited budget? I'd like to keep the price of the reel under $50. I see alot of pflueger reels priced inexpensively($30). I've also seen A redington in my price range. I plan on upgrading at some point, so I can have a back up rod or one for friends to use. My main concern is to be able to some serious fishing from now until winter. You are bound to have some decent flyshops in your area. I'd drop-in on one of them and look at some of the reels. Or simply Google reels and view hundreds, if not thousands. I have nothing against Pflueger (sp?), but the old ones I have are quite heavy and much to heavy for the rods I use to fish for trout, on small NC streams. 2) Do I need a large arbor reel? Would you mind explaining what that is? Not for any trout I could catch on my small to medium streams, but someone is likely to say otherwise. Large arbors are primarily used for big fish fishin', as they will take in more line in one turn of the spool than your standard reels, I believe. 3) I've read that a good quality line is more important than the reel, is this true? Yes, IMMHO! You need to know how you plan to fish: dry fly, nymph, streamers... I primaily use double tapered floating lines of good to excellent quality, for my dry fly fishin. Some folks like to use a weight-forward line. If you are nymphing in deep waters or lake fishin', you may want a sinking line. Sinkin; lines come in varying degrees of sink, so you really need to know just how you plan to fish. You could do as I do and by an extra spool for the reel you purchase and line one with floating line and the other with sinking line. What would be a good line? I can probably drop another 40-50 bucks on this. Cortland is a reputable dealer, as is Orvis. I'm sure others will have many good suggestions, as well. 4) Which type of line would you reccomend? Weight Forward or a double taper. Personally, I'd start with DT, as I think it is more forgiving for the beginner. It worked for me! Buy some books on casting, flyfishing, and any other aspects that you might think will be helpful. See if your local flyshop rents theie videos. Search the WEB for knot tying sites, fly patterns, casting instructions...there is a world of good on the internet! This is a favorite site of many: http://www.sexyloops.com/ If you Google "Flyfishing" you will get approx. 31,000,000 hits, so start your search early and stay up late! Op Thanks for reading all of this and thanks in Advance for any responses, Dwayne |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
On 7 Mar 2006 14:47:54 -0800, "Erratic Grouse"
wrote: Hello, I recently purchased my first fly rod, a 5wt 4 piece. Now I need to find a reasonably priced reel to go with it. Most of my fishing will be for trout on small to medium sized streams in the Pacific Northwest. There will also be the occasional lake and pond fishing for trout and bass. My questions a 1.) What is a good reel for a college student on very limited budget? I'd like to keep the price of the reel under $50. I see alot of pflueger reels priced inexpensively($30). I've also seen A redington in my price range. I plan on upgrading at some point, so I can have a back up rod or one for friends to use. My main concern is to be able to some serious fishing from now until winter. Orvis makes a fairly good beginner's reel, The Clearwater, for under $40. Also, the Battenkill for about 80. The Redington should also be good. 2) Do I need a large arbor reel? Would you mind explaining what that is? A large arbor reel holds more backing than a normal reel. On a five weight rod, I don't think you need a large arbor reel. (The arbor is the part of the reel (spool) that holds the line and backing. Also, a large arbor reel requires fewer turns of the crank (handle) to bring in the line.) 3) I've read that a good quality line is more important than the reel, is this true? What would be a good line? I can probably drop another 40-50 bucks on this. 4) Which type of line would you reccomend? Weight Forward or a double taper. Sci Anglers, Rio, Cortland all make good lines for about $50. If you use a double taper line, you can reverse it and use it twice as long as you would a WF. If you keep it clean (soap and water) and don't abrade it on rocks, logs, etc, a DT should last you four or more years. There are those on this forum that will tell you it will last longer, but they're cheap *******s to begin with. Thanks for reading all of this and thanks in Advance for any responses, Your welcome. Good luck. Post what you decide. BTW, what rod did you buy? Name/model? Dave |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
"Erratic Grouse" wrote in message ups.com... 2) Do I need a large arbor reel? Would you mind explaining what that is? The arbor is the center hub. If it's small and you wind your fly line onto it directly, your line will be wrapped in tight coils - not good. Traditionally you use about 100 yards of backing, which builds up the center hub, so the actual fly line is not wound around the hub directly. As far as I can tell, the only use of a large arbor reel is so that you don't have to use much backing to still get a thick hub section. Unless the entire reel is of larger diameter, in which case you can actually reel in the line faster. 4) Which type of line would you reccomend? Weight Forward or a double taper. Contrary to popular belief, double taper line does not offer a "more delicate" presentation. If you're going to be making longer, regular casts, get weight forward. If you're going to be making normal length casts of up to about 40 feet and will be making longer roll casts and line mends, get double taper. It really doesn't matter much. |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
"Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... A large arbor reel holds more backing than a normal reel. I think there are different types of large arbor. If just the center hub is bigger, it would actually hold less. |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
"jeffc" wrote in message ... "Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... A large arbor reel holds more backing than a normal reel. I think there are different types of large arbor. If just the center hub is bigger, it would actually hold less. http://p218.ezboard.com/fflyfishingt...picID=35.topic |
First Fly Rod, Reel and line Questions??
On Wed, 08 Mar 2006 04:13:48 GMT, "jeffc" wrote:
"Dave LaCourse" wrote in message .. . A large arbor reel holds more backing than a normal reel. I think there are different types of large arbor. If just the center hub is bigger, it would actually hold less. Unless it is much wider, as are all of my large arbors. |
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