![]() |
Curado overboard.
Well I was having a great day fishing this morning, nice weather for a
change, the bass were biting, and I should have paid more attention to that funny feeling in the rod, but just had to make one more cast to a hot spot. Long story short, the real seat was loose and the cast sent both the spinner bait and my favorite Curado CU100 into about 8' of clear clean fresh water. Fortunately the line eventually tangled around the star drag so I was able to pull it back up without pulling all the line off first, but it was under water for a good minute or two. I let it dry out in the sun for the rest of the morning, made a couple of casts right before I left and it worked fine. I checked the Shimano website and was surprised to find they only recommend a heavy duty maintenance teardown(gears, drag washers, anti- reverse roller, etc) for reels submerged in sal****er. I did the normal cleanup and lubed the bearings, brakes and level wind, but I wondering if I should do more or if there's any parts in there that are going to rust? Anyone have experience with this sort of thing? I'd guess float or wader fisherman dunk their reels occasionally, are they made to handle that? |
Curado overboard.
AJ wrote:
Well I was having a great day fishing this morning, nice weather for a change, the bass were biting, and I should have paid more attention to that funny feeling in the rod, but just had to make one more cast to a hot spot. Long story short, the real seat was loose and the cast sent both the spinner bait and my favorite Curado CU100 into about 8' of clear clean fresh water. Fortunately the line eventually tangled around the star drag so I was able to pull it back up without pulling all the line off first, but it was under water for a good minute or two. I let it dry out in the sun for the rest of the morning, made a couple of casts right before I left and it worked fine. I checked the Shimano website and was surprised to find they only recommend a heavy duty maintenance teardown(gears, drag washers, anti- reverse roller, etc) for reels submerged in sal****er. I did the normal cleanup and lubed the bearings, brakes and level wind, but I wondering if I should do more or if there's any parts in there that are going to rust? Anyone have experience with this sort of thing? I'd guess float or wader fisherman dunk their reels occasionally, are they made to handle that? You should be fine. I regularly hose my reels (and rods) with fresh water after use in sal****er - not only when they are splashed. My Calcutta's have been fine with a fresh water rinse. Dan |
Curado overboard.
http://home.att.net/~kelley_brown/reelservice.html
-- Member Of The National Association Of Photoshop Professionals "AJ" wrote in message .net... Well I was having a great day fishing this morning, nice weather for a change, the bass were biting, and I should have paid more attention to that funny feeling in the rod, but just had to make one more cast to a hot spot. Long story short, the real seat was loose and the cast sent both the spinner bait and my favorite Curado CU100 into about 8' of clear clean fresh water. Fortunately the line eventually tangled around the star drag so I was able to pull it back up without pulling all the line off first, but it was under water for a good minute or two. I let it dry out in the sun for the rest of the morning, made a couple of casts right before I left and it worked fine. I checked the Shimano website and was surprised to find they only recommend a heavy duty maintenance teardown(gears, drag washers, anti- reverse roller, etc) for reels submerged in sal****er. I did the normal cleanup and lubed the bearings, brakes and level wind, but I wondering if I should do more or if there's any parts in there that are going to rust? Anyone have experience with this sort of thing? I'd guess float or wader fisherman dunk their reels occasionally, are they made to handle that? |
Curado overboard.
I have never done any service on my Curados (some are over four years old)
except put a drop of oil on the bearings once a year and blow out any gunk and dust. They work really well. A couple of them have been submerged. "AJ" wrote in message .net... Well I was having a great day fishing this morning, nice weather for a change, the bass were biting, and I should have paid more attention to that funny feeling in the rod, but just had to make one more cast to a hot spot. Long story short, the real seat was loose and the cast sent both the spinner bait and my favorite Curado CU100 into about 8' of clear clean fresh water. Fortunately the line eventually tangled around the star drag so I was able to pull it back up without pulling all the line off first, but it was under water for a good minute or two. I let it dry out in the sun for the rest of the morning, made a couple of casts right before I left and it worked fine. I checked the Shimano website and was surprised to find they only recommend a heavy duty maintenance teardown(gears, drag washers, anti- reverse roller, etc) for reels submerged in sal****er. I did the normal cleanup and lubed the bearings, brakes and level wind, but I wondering if I should do more or if there's any parts in there that are going to rust? Anyone have experience with this sort of thing? I'd guess float or wader fisherman dunk their reels occasionally, are they made to handle that? -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Curado overboard.
AJ,
I love Shimmano Reels, but they have had, for sometime, sitting in the reel seat problems with some rods and some reel models. For instance, many years ago I purchased and still have several Shimmano Curado Reels. I placed them all on St. Croix Rods. I had 3 fall out of the rod seats at different times. When I called St. Croix they were less than enthusiastic about addressing any problems with the Curados, though they admitted that there was a problem with those model reels in the St. Croix rods. Seems to me several members on here had either had similar problems or knew of those problems. I still use my Curados with those St. Croix rods, but I check regularly and often to make sure the reel is seated properly and is tight. -- God Bless America Josh The Bad Bear |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:15 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2006 FishingBanter