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#1
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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. When I go fishing, I want to fish, not untangle the reel ever 4th cast. 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. 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. I'm getting the notion the reel industry is doing a lot of bs-ing to sell bait casters. skeptic bordering on cynic... |
#2
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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. Carlos |
#3
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![]() 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. Carlos let me elaborate: 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. The only useful purpose I can see for a baitcaster, is fishing from a boat on large lakes and ocean, where the bait it tossed a few feet from the boat, and then trolled- and the fish are huge over 15 pounds. Calling that 1800's technology a "baitcaster" is somewhat of an oxymoron- it's a winch designed to haul up heavy fish- and a winch gets tangled when it spins backwards fast. The makers of those reals need to improve them a bit, to eliminate backlash. They don't cast bait for crap ! The fisherman would be better off attaching the heavy lure or bait, and throwing it with his pitching arm where he wants it, then using the reel to retrieve the fish. And I say that only half kidding, because he'd have no backlash tangles then. |
#4
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Apparently you haven't used a baitcaster in a LONG time...
"duty-honor-country" wrote in message ups.com... I've been fishing for 37 years now, Calling that 1800's technology a "baitcaster" is somewhat of an oxymoron- it's a winch designed to haul up heavy fish- and a winch gets tangled when it spins backwards fast. The makers of those reals need to improve them a bit, to eliminate backlash. They don't cast bait for crap ! The fisherman would be better off attaching the heavy lure or bait, and throwing it with his pitching arm where he wants it, then using the reel to retrieve the fish. And I say that only half kidding, because he'd have no backlash tangles then. |
#5
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"Charles B. Summers" wrote in message
. .. Apparently you haven't used a baitcaster in a LONG time... "duty-honor-country" wrote in message ups.com... I've been fishing for 37 years now, Calling that 1800's technology a "baitcaster" is somewhat of an oxymoron- it's a winch designed to haul up heavy fish- and a winch gets tangled when it spins backwards fast. The makers of those reals need to improve them a bit, to eliminate backlash. They don't cast bait for crap ! The fisherman would be better off attaching the heavy lure or bait, and throwing it with his pitching arm where he wants it, then using the reel to retrieve the fish. And I say that only half kidding, because he'd have no backlash tangles then. I'm a long time spinning reel advocate. In fact I think if a person were restricted to one rod for all kinds of fishing I'ld have to go with the with a medium power fast action spinning rod, but don't soft sell the baitcasters of today. With internal breaking controls, spool tension adjustment and high quality bearings a highly skilled angler can cast pretty far with incredible accuracy. In fact to such a point that they will malign the accuracy of spinning tackle. Those of us who grew up casting light lures while skulking through brush choked banks to get to our fishing holes know that you can just as accurately with spinning tackle, Where a baitcaster really shines though is in short and medium range accuracy. The thumb on the spool allows an angler a great deal of speed and distance control when pitching. I'm not talking about fdropping it over the side of the boat, but pitching to targets from 20 to maybe a 80 feet away from the boat. With a little practice you can even control travel to make a bait go around a target like to drop behind a stump. On the flip side, if you are comparing a Daiwa Tournament 1600 spinning reel to a Penn Jig master you are looking at the wrong thing. I actually can pitch with a Penn Jig Master, but with only a spool tension control it is not. Try comparing instead to a properly adjust Quantum Accurist, Browning Citori, or Shimano Curado. And don't get all on about cheap spinning reels either. I have probably owned more than 100 of them over the years, and a cheap spinning reel has just as many problems as a cheap any other kind of reel. They aren't the same problems, but they are problems just the same. Quality products usually start at a little more money. Cheap spinning reels simple don't hold up as well as more expensive ones. I happen to really like the Daiwa 1600 Tournament reels, and the Shimano Symetre is in about the same class. The cheaper Mitchel 300X and 308X fishes very well, but it has a handle design problem that causes it to loosen up if not checked constantly. To be fair, the one cheap baitcaster I bought didn't hold up any better. Anyway, to say baitcasters are junk or can't cast is an gross overstatement. To say spinning reels are easier to use with less experience is probably more accurate. To say one or the other is more accurate is just plain silly. I do believe that at short and medium range a skilled angler can use a bait caster with slightly better accuracy, but a spinning reel in the hands of a skilled angler would not be far behind. To say one can cast further than the other isn't necessarily true either. I fished once with a guy named Simon Apodaka who was able to casta 3/4 oz rattle trap on his baitcasting tackle further than I could cast a 3/4 Kastmaster spoon. The fact that Simon is a custom rod builder who has a special purpose rod for every lure in his bag might have had some bearing on the end results, but the fact is that both of our baits traveled so far that we could only see them from the sun glinting off the shiny sides. I have to admit that with very light baits like small spinners, tiny spoons, and some weightless worms a spinning rod seems to cast slightly further. I also think that fishing in windy conditions a spinning rig will cast slightly better into the wind with most baits, but there are guys who can do it well with baitcasters. Hammer (Kwame Kuanda) and I fished a November tournament where we were slinging spinner baits into the teeth of a 25-35 mph blow. He was casting a 1/2 oz bait and I was throwing a 3/8 oz SWL spinner bait. Yes he had to pick out a backlash or two, but I had to deal with more looping line sailing up and away from the rod and reel before I could make contact with the bait on the retrieve. Was one better than the other? I don't think so. I caught the bigger fish, and a few more of them, but we both caught good fish and we took second that day. The amazing thing though was that he was consistantly casting about 25 to 30 feet further than I was. That's about the same as if we were casting the different size baits on identical tackle. No I doubt I could do that with baitcasting tackle. I certainly couldn't back then, but it demonstrates the point that baitcasting tackle can get very close to the same distance casting in adverse conditions in the hands of a skilled angler. Just like spinning tackle can be quite accurate in the hands of somebody who knows how to use it. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#6
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![]() Bob La Londe wrote: "Charles B. Summers" wrote in message . .. Apparently you haven't used a baitcaster in a LONG time... "duty-honor-country" wrote in message ups.com... I've been fishing for 37 years now, Calling that 1800's technology a "baitcaster" is somewhat of an oxymoron- it's a winch designed to haul up heavy fish- and a winch gets tangled when it spins backwards fast. The makers of those reals need to improve them a bit, to eliminate backlash. They don't cast bait for crap ! The fisherman would be better off attaching the heavy lure or bait, and throwing it with his pitching arm where he wants it, then using the reel to retrieve the fish. And I say that only half kidding, because he'd have no backlash tangles then. I'm a long time spinning reel advocate. In fact I think if a person were restricted to one rod for all kinds of fishing I'ld have to go with the with a medium power fast action spinning rod, but don't soft sell the baitcasters of today. With internal breaking controls, spool tension adjustment and high quality bearings a highly skilled angler can cast pretty far with incredible accuracy. In fact to such a point that they will malign the accuracy of spinning tackle. Those of us who grew up casting light lures while skulking through brush choked banks to get to our fishing holes know that you can just as accurately with spinning tackle, Where a baitcaster really shines though is in short and medium range accuracy. The thumb on the spool allows an angler a great deal of speed and distance control when pitching. I'm not talking about fdropping it over the side of the boat, but pitching to targets from 20 to maybe a 80 feet away from the boat. With a little practice you can even control travel to make a bait go around a target like to drop behind a stump. On the flip side, if you are comparing a Daiwa Tournament 1600 spinning reel to a Penn Jig master you are looking at the wrong thing. I actually can pitch with a Penn Jig Master, but with only a spool tension control it is not. Try comparing instead to a properly adjust Quantum Accurist, Browning Citori, or Shimano Curado. And don't get all on about cheap spinning reels either. I have probably owned more than 100 of them over the years, and a cheap spinning reel has just as many problems as a cheap any other kind of reel. They aren't the same problems, but they are problems just the same. Quality products usually start at a little more money. Cheap spinning reels simple don't hold up as well as more expensive ones. I happen to really like the Daiwa 1600 Tournament reels, and the Shimano Symetre is in about the same class. The cheaper Mitchel 300X and 308X fishes very well, but it has a handle design problem that causes it to loosen up if not checked constantly. To be fair, the one cheap baitcaster I bought didn't hold up any better. Anyway, to say baitcasters are junk or can't cast is an gross overstatement. To say spinning reels are easier to use with less experience is probably more accurate. To say one or the other is more accurate is just plain silly. I do believe that at short and medium range a skilled angler can use a bait caster with slightly better accuracy, but a spinning reel in the hands of a skilled angler would not be far behind. To say one can cast further than the other isn't necessarily true either. I fished once with a guy named Simon Apodaka who was able to casta 3/4 oz rattle trap on his baitcasting tackle further than I could cast a 3/4 Kastmaster spoon. The fact that Simon is a custom rod builder who has a special purpose rod for every lure in his bag might have had some bearing on the end results, but the fact is that both of our baits traveled so far that we could only see them from the sun glinting off the shiny sides. I have to admit that with very light baits like small spinners, tiny spoons, and some weightless worms a spinning rod seems to cast slightly further. I also think that fishing in windy conditions a spinning rig will cast slightly better into the wind with most baits, but there are guys who can do it well with baitcasters. Hammer (Kwame Kuanda) and I fished a November tournament where we were slinging spinner baits into the teeth of a 25-35 mph blow. He was casting a 1/2 oz bait and I was throwing a 3/8 oz SWL spinner bait. Yes he had to pick out a backlash or two, but I had to deal with more looping line sailing up and away from the rod and reel before I could make contact with the bait on the retrieve. Was one better than the other? I don't think so. I caught the bigger fish, and a few more of them, but we both caught good fish and we took second that day. The amazing thing though was that he was consistantly casting about 25 to 30 feet further than I was. That's about the same as if we were casting the different size baits on identical tackle. No I doubt I could do that with baitcasting tackle. I certainly couldn't back then, but it demonstrates the point that baitcasting tackle can get very close to the same distance casting in adverse conditions in the hands of a skilled angler. Just like spinning tackle can be quite accurate in the hands of somebody who knows how to use it. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com You'll never have a backlash problem with a spinning reel. You may pull a few tangles out on a newly filled reel, but that will be it. You will have much more tangles with a baitcaster than a spinning rod. And all of a sudden, the "farther" argument for casting with baitcasters has disappeared. I've used a lot of reels in my lifetime too. Skilled angler doesn't equate to skilled baitcaster. Unless you're hauling up 15 lb. fish every time, baitcasters are an exercise in futility. It's akin to using a Sherman tank to go plinking cans- and having to maintain the tank to do it. |
#7
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![]() Bob La Londe wrote: "Charles B. Summers" wrote in message . .. Apparently you haven't used a baitcaster in a LONG time... "duty-honor-country" wrote in message ups.com... I've been fishing for 37 years now, Calling that 1800's technology a "baitcaster" is somewhat of an oxymoron- it's a winch designed to haul up heavy fish- and a winch gets tangled when it spins backwards fast. The makers of those reals need to improve them a bit, to eliminate backlash. They don't cast bait for crap ! The fisherman would be better off attaching the heavy lure or bait, and throwing it with his pitching arm where he wants it, then using the reel to retrieve the fish. And I say that only half kidding, because he'd have no backlash tangles then. I'm a long time spinning reel advocate. In fact I think if a person were restricted to one rod for all kinds of fishing I'ld have to go with the with a medium power fast action spinning rod, but don't soft sell the baitcasters of today. With internal breaking controls, spool tension adjustment and high quality bearings a highly skilled angler can cast pretty far with incredible accuracy. In fact to such a point that they will malign the accuracy of spinning tackle. Those of us who grew up casting light lures while skulking through brush choked banks to get to our fishing holes know that you can just as accurately with spinning tackle, Where a baitcaster really shines though is in short and medium range accuracy. The thumb on the spool allows an angler a great deal of speed and distance control when pitching. I'm not talking about fdropping it over the side of the boat, but pitching to targets from 20 to maybe a 80 feet away from the boat. With a little practice you can even control travel to make a bait go around a target like to drop behind a stump. On the flip side, if you are comparing a Daiwa Tournament 1600 spinning reel to a Penn Jig master you are looking at the wrong thing. I actually can pitch with a Penn Jig Master, but with only a spool tension control it is not. Try comparing instead to a properly adjust Quantum Accurist, Browning Citori, or Shimano Curado. And don't get all on about cheap spinning reels either. I have probably owned more than 100 of them over the years, and a cheap spinning reel has just as many problems as a cheap any other kind of reel. They aren't the same problems, but they are problems just the same. Quality products usually start at a little more money. Cheap spinning reels simple don't hold up as well as more expensive ones. I happen to really like the Daiwa 1600 Tournament reels, and the Shimano Symetre is in about the same class. The cheaper Mitchel 300X and 308X fishes very well, but it has a handle design problem that causes it to loosen up if not checked constantly. To be fair, the one cheap baitcaster I bought didn't hold up any better. Anyway, to say baitcasters are junk or can't cast is an gross overstatement. To say spinning reels are easier to use with less experience is probably more accurate. To say one or the other is more accurate is just plain silly. I do believe that at short and medium range a skilled angler can use a bait caster with slightly better accuracy, but a spinning reel in the hands of a skilled angler would not be far behind. To say one can cast further than the other isn't necessarily true either. I fished once with a guy named Simon Apodaka who was able to casta 3/4 oz rattle trap on his baitcasting tackle further than I could cast a 3/4 Kastmaster spoon. The fact that Simon is a custom rod builder who has a special purpose rod for every lure in his bag might have had some bearing on the end results, but the fact is that both of our baits traveled so far that we could only see them from the sun glinting off the shiny sides. I have to admit that with very light baits like small spinners, tiny spoons, and some weightless worms a spinning rod seems to cast slightly further. I also think that fishing in windy conditions a spinning rig will cast slightly better into the wind with most baits, but there are guys who can do it well with baitcasters. Hammer (Kwame Kuanda) and I fished a November tournament where we were slinging spinner baits into the teeth of a 25-35 mph blow. He was casting a 1/2 oz bait and I was throwing a 3/8 oz SWL spinner bait. Yes he had to pick out a backlash or two, but I had to deal with more looping line sailing up and away from the rod and reel before I could make contact with the bait on the retrieve. Was one better than the other? I don't think so. I caught the bigger fish, and a few more of them, but we both caught good fish and we took second that day. The amazing thing though was that he was consistantly casting about 25 to 30 feet further than I was. That's about the same as if we were casting the different size baits on identical tackle. No I doubt I could do that with baitcasting tackle. I certainly couldn't back then, but it demonstrates the point that baitcasting tackle can get very close to the same distance casting in adverse conditions in the hands of a skilled angler. Just like spinning tackle can be quite accurate in the hands of somebody who knows how to use it. -- Bob La Londe Fishing Arizona & The Colorado River Fishing Forums & Contests http://www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ps- my spinning reel is a Shimano 4000 that handles up to 12 lb. line. I see absolutely no advantage to a baitcaster using 12 pound line in comparison, and a lot of aggravation from backlash tangles with the latter. There would have to be a pressing need for hauling in 15+ lb. fish on a regular basis, to make a baitcaster worthwhile, such as an entry level baitcaster that handles 20 pound line. Where's the advantage to a reel, that you have to monitor with thumb pressure to prevent backlashes- to catch sub-12 lb. fish ? The spinning rod/reel combo I have now handles 3/4 oz. lures without problem. One can buy about 5 entry-level spinning reels for the price of one good baitcaster. Suffice to say, those 5 reels would last a long, long time overall. I have had cheap spinning reels fall apart eventually- from heavy use, dirt, falling in the water, lack of oiling- but it took 20 years of such abuse to destroy them. And all the while, they casted further and easier, with less tangles, than a baitcaster would. There simply is not a lot of places to fish, where you catch 5 bass all over 10 pounds in one day. That's the exception, not the rule. That's TV tourney fishing- not everyday real world. |
#8
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"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. |
#9
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On 7 Aug 2006 07:36:31 -0700, "duty-honor-country"
wrote: Snip ps- my spinning reel is a Shimano 4000 that handles up to 12 lb. line. I see absolutely no advantage to a baitcaster using 12 pound line in comparison, and a lot of aggravation from backlash tangles with the latter. There would have to be a pressing need for hauling in 15+ lb. fish on a regular basis, to make a baitcaster worthwhile, such as an entry level baitcaster that handles 20 pound line. Where's the advantage to a reel, that you have to monitor with thumb pressure to prevent backlashes- to catch sub-12 lb. fish ? The spinning rod/reel combo I have now handles 3/4 oz. lures without problem. One can buy about 5 entry-level spinning reels for the price of one good baitcaster. Suffice to say, those 5 reels would last a long, long time overall. I have had cheap spinning reels fall apart eventually- from heavy use, dirt, falling in the water, lack of oiling- but it took 20 years of such abuse to destroy them. And all the while, they casted further and easier, with less tangles, than a baitcaster would. There simply is not a lot of places to fish, where you catch 5 bass all over 10 pounds in one day. That's the exception, not the rule. That's TV tourney fishing- not everyday real world. Two things come to mind after reading your posts. One, someone embarressed the living daylites out of you because of your inability to master a modern baitcaster in two days time. This could be caused by several things. You might be unable to afford the $125 to 200 for a quality baitcaster. You might be unable to ask someone for instruction in the proper use of a baitcaster. You might be physically unable to control a baitcaster. Oh the list could go on and on. Two, from your rantings I would place you in the troll catigory...The real poor skills, semi-intelegent dweeb type troll. I do not have to put forth anything more than your rantings to prove this point, you have done all the work for me. Now, if you really want to know how to use a baitcaster properly, take your attitude and shove it. Come back in a week or so and apologize for your uncalled for behaviour and ask for advice on how to use the specific brand baitcaster you failed to master. I am sure someone here will be willing to help you out. If not, it's your loss not mine. PLONKED the troll! |
#10
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Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now wrote:
"duty-honor-country" wrote: Snip ps- my spinning reel is a Shimano 4000 that handles up to 12 lb. line. I see absolutely no advantage to a baitcaster using 12 pound line in comparison, and a lot of aggravation from backlash tangles with the latter. ... snip Two, from your rantings I would place you in the troll catigory...The real poor skills, semi-intelegent dweeb type troll. I do not have to put forth anything more than your rantings to prove this point, you have done all the work for me. ... Damn man, that's harsh. Mr. d-h-c sounds to me like an opinionated old cuss looking for an argument. Kinda like a lot of fishermen I know. Usenet isn't very conducive to the kind of arguments that would seem perfectly OK when seated next to someone at the bar quaffing a brew. I'm willing to give Mr. d-h-c the benefit of the doubt and if I disagreed with him I'd argue it with him with a good nature and my tongue in cheek. But I tried to cast with my Dad's old Ambasseuder 5000 and never could get the hang of the damn thing, so I basically agree with Mr. d-h-c. 1/2 :-) -- Ken Fortenberry |
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