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"steve sullivan" wrote in message
... In article , wrote: wrote... My friend is a fly shop owner and he told me the reason warranty prices are rising is dishonesty. He said guides will break a rod themselves and send it back to the company at the end of the season. They have down time so they can afford the wait, and it prevents them from having it break on a guide trip and loosing serious $$ Yeah, those people who slam them in car doors, ceiling fans, etc are just a minor segment of the warranty returns...... What a dumbass! Since the no fault warranty warranty repairs have skyrocketted. So those accidents just happen to dramatically increase? And you call ME a dumbass when I have the facts and the anecdotes from fly shop owners to back it up? You don't have any facts, just the opinion of one flyshop owner, and it doesn't make sense. I sincerely doubt guides will intentionally break a rod at the end of the guiding year. I have never intentionally broken a rod, and none of the folks I guide with do either. In fact, about the only time I break a rod is when I am fishing on my own, and when it happens, it usually through something pretty spectacular like a fall. You should take a closer look at the stated reasons for guides breaking fly rods intentionally. According to you, if a guide intentionally breaks a rod at the end of the season, it won't happen on a guided trip? That is just plain ridiculous. In the first case, it presupposes that fly rods wear out in a year. That is nonsense. Secondly, clients typically use their own rods, not the guides'. Guides will carry spare rods in case of accidents, and these rods would never see enough use by a client to wear out so that a guide would consider breaking it. Thirdly, fly rods break for a variety of reasons, and a new rod is a likely to snap as an old rod. Breakage is not predictable, and a pretty low probability event that few really worry about, short of carrying a few spares with them. I think the point Warren was trying to make, and it is a good one, is that guides are a relatively small component of the rod market. There are many, many, more anglers than there are guides. The reason fly rod replacements have increased is because of the increase in rod sales to the general public, not to guides. Tim Lysyk timlysyk at telus dot net |
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