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#1
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Hello,
It's January and I am trying to get all my gear ready for spring bass fishing. In the past I have always picked up a couple of cheap ron/reel spinning combos. By the end of the season they are in pieces... This year I did some research and decided to get some better equipment. I was excited when I purchased 2 Shimano Sonora reels and a couple of simple berkeley rods. (the Sonora is the bottom end of the line but has gotton good reviews as a value reel) As soon as I got them married up and started fiddling with them, two things become apparent - and seem quite odd to me. First, after a cast, when you turn the reel handle to close the bail, you have to really, *really* give a ton of effort to do so. So much that the whole assembly twists in my hands. Both reels seem identical in this regard, so it must be intentional. Is this common? Is this configurable? This alone makes me likely to return the pair. The effort required seems ridiulous. Secondly, (this may be tough to describe) in the past, just before I open the bail to finger the line and cast, I "backup" the spool to the right position - the reel seemed to know where it should be and only will reverse to that point - these reels do not seem to work that way. They have the obvious two settings that I can see, either no backup whatsoever (no reverse spin), or full 2 directional free-spinning in both directions. If set to no backup, which is what you what when normally fishing, the only way to position the spool seems to be to carefully "eye it to the right point" when reeling in originally. This is very tedious. OK. All the cheap ones I have had in the past: Let me flip the bail closed with very little effort (click), Allowed me to quickly and mechanically line up the spool for my next cast with an effortless, and habitual reverse backup of quarter turn or so and provided a nice "stop" at that point. Please let me know what I am missing here. I am entirely self taught in the casting department so I may be missing major things here. Am I just a dolt that should stay away from the real reels? Thank you for helping a novice, tonyM |
#2
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On 15 Jan 2007 14:46:52 -0800, "tonyM"
wrote (with possible editing): Hello, It's January and I am trying to get all my gear ready for spring bass fishing. In the past I have always picked up a couple of cheap ron/reel spinning combos. By the end of the season they are in pieces... This year I did some research and decided to get some better equipment. I was excited when I purchased 2 Shimano Sonora reels and a couple of simple berkeley rods. (the Sonora is the bottom end of the line but has gotton good reviews as a value reel) As soon as I got them married up and started fiddling with them, two things become apparent - and seem quite odd to me. First, after a cast, when you turn the reel handle to close the bail, you have to really, *really* give a ton of effort to do so. So much that the whole assembly twists in my hands. Both reels seem identical in this regard, so it must be intentional. Is this common? Is this configurable? This alone makes me likely to return the pair. The effort required seems ridiulous. I don't own any Sonoras, but I'd guess that is caused by the physical position the reel is left in after casting. If a reel is right up against the bail flipper, it is often hard to close. The solution is just to turn the reel backwards a bit, and that gets solved by the answer to your second question below. Secondly, (this may be tough to describe) in the past, just before I open the bail to finger the line and cast, I "backup" the spool to the right position - the reel seemed to know where it should be and only will reverse to that point - these reels do not seem to work that way. They have the obvious two settings that I can see, either no backup whatsoever (no reverse spin), or full 2 directional free-spinning in both directions. If set to no backup, which is what you what when normally fishing, the only way to position the spool seems to be to carefully "eye it to the right point" when reeling in originally. This is very tedious. It sounds like you need to flip the little lever which lets the reel freespool in either direction. As I said, I don't own any Shimanos, but they have an awfully good reputation. Hard to imagine they did things wrong, but stranger things have happened... anon OK. All the cheap ones I have had in the past: Let me flip the bail closed with very little effort (click), Allowed me to quickly and mechanically line up the spool for my next cast with an effortless, and habitual reverse backup of quarter turn or so and provided a nice "stop" at that point. Please let me know what I am missing here. I am entirely self taught in the casting department so I may be missing major things here. Am I just a dolt that should stay away from the real reels? Thank you for helping a novice, tonyM -- Larry Email to rapp at lmr dot com |
#3
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![]() "tonyM" wrote in message ups.com... Hello, It's January and I am trying to get all my gear ready for spring bass fishing. This year I did some research and decided to get some better equipment. I was excited when I purchased 2 Shimano Sonora reels and a couple of simple berkeley rods. (the Sonora is the bottom end of the line but has gotton good reviews as a value reel) As soon as I got them married up and started fiddling with them, two things become apparent - and seem quite odd to me. First, after a cast, when you turn the reel handle to close the bail, you have to really, *really* give a ton of effort to do so. So much that the whole assembly twists in my hands. Both reels seem identical in this regard, so it must be intentional. Is this common? Is this configurable? This alone makes me likely to return the pair. The effort required seems ridiulous. While playing with the new Shimano reel that I got for Christmas, I noticed the same thing. However, went fishing two weeks ago and in actual use, it didn't seem to do this. Perhaps, the tension of the line or the natural position of the bail when flipped while actually fishing makes the difference. Tom G. |
#4
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"Tom G" wrote in message
news:9Nhrh.10405$My1.10189@trndny03... "tonyM" wrote in message ups.com... Hello, It's January and I am trying to get all my gear ready for spring bass fishing. This year I did some research and decided to get some better equipment. I was excited when I purchased 2 Shimano Sonora reels and a couple of simple berkeley rods. (the Sonora is the bottom end of the line but has gotton good reviews as a value reel) As soon as I got them married up and started fiddling with them, two things become apparent - and seem quite odd to me. First, after a cast, when you turn the reel handle to close the bail, you have to really, *really* give a ton of effort to do so. So much that the whole assembly twists in my hands. Don't use the handle to close the bail, use your hand. No more "twist" and the reel will last longer. |
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