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#1
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I was giving this website a look-over & stumbled across these rods-
http://www.fishingworld.com/KistlerR...43153323449&Ca rt=10760377343447427&SKU=He63APC I have no clue what the secret, lighter than graphite material is that these guys use to build their rods (they claim it's lighter & stronger, but nowhere do they claim it's more sensative), but I do see something that looks interesting. I thought about how I grip my casting rods while working soft-plastics, jigs, jerkbaits, crankbaits & other lures. I "palm" the reel with my left hand, and my index finger rests on the small cork piece between the reel & the rod body. I gotta think that if my finger were resting directly on the rod blank, as with these rods, that sensitivity would be increased bigtime. I'm going to ask John Uhler of Furnace Bay Rods his opinion on this, and unless he can point out something I'm missing here I'm gonna have him make me a rod like that. I'd love to hear the better fishermen on this newsgroup's opinions on this to. I love the idea of having my finger in direct contact with the rod blank. As for rods being heavy & wearing guys' arms out during a fishing trip, lol. What girly-boys are they talking about? Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ |
#2
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![]() "go-bassn" wrote in message As for rods being heavy & wearing guys' arms out during a fishing trip, lol. What girly-boys are they talking about? Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ Maybe me. about 35 years ago I chucked big Rebels for stripers in the sloughs of SF bay. Behind the Oakland Faders offices. Big glass spinner, and Mitchell 300 reel. One day, a guy let me use is Fenwick for a few minutes. Love at first throw. I still use the Fenwick steelhead rod I bought shortly thereafter. Bill |
#3
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Warren, again I read marketing hype in that article. As to the cork
foregrip, I agree that if it is solidly attached to the blank it might dampen the "feel" slightly. So the object of the game is to use a hood that does not come into direct contact with the blank when the reel is secured in place. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I was giving this website a look-over & stumbled across these rods- http://www.fishingworld.com/KistlerR...43153323449&Ca rt=10760377343447427&SKU=He63APC I have no clue what the secret, lighter than graphite material is that these guys use to build their rods (they claim it's lighter & stronger, but nowhere do they claim it's more sensative), but I do see something that looks interesting. I thought about how I grip my casting rods while working soft-plastics, jigs, jerkbaits, crankbaits & other lures. I "palm" the reel with my left hand, and my index finger rests on the small cork piece between the reel & the rod body. I gotta think that if my finger were resting directly on the rod blank, as with these rods, that sensitivity would be increased bigtime. I'm going to ask John Uhler of Furnace Bay Rods his opinion on this, and unless he can point out something I'm missing here I'm gonna have him make me a rod like that. I'd love to hear the better fishermen on this newsgroup's opinions on this to. I love the idea of having my finger in direct contact with the rod blank. As for rods being heavy & wearing guys' arms out during a fishing trip, lol. What girly-boys are they talking about? Warren -- http://www.warrenwolk.com/ |
#4
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![]() \"The Shadow\" wrote: Warren, again I read marketing hype in that article. As to the cork foregrip, I agree that if it is solidly attached to the blank it might dampen the "feel" slightly. So the object of the game is to use a hood that does not come into direct contact with the blank when the reel is secured in place. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods Rod, When your hand or fingers rest on the hood, wouldn't you loose sensitivity because it is not directly in contact with the blank? Jack ~~ Jack Dalzell http://secretweaponlures.com/jdbass/jdhome.htm http://www.OutdoorFrontiers.com ~~ |
#5
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Absolutely Jack. Which is why my right hand remains in contact with the
"reelseat" . As I said if the cork hood is bonded to the blank , you could experience a reduction in sensitivity. But the hoods that we use are not glued to the blank. They are glued to a 100% graphite hood which locks the reelseat in. This hood itself never touches the blank. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods "Jack Dalzell Jr." wrote in message ... \"The Shadow\" wrote: Warren, again I read marketing hype in that article. As to the cork foregrip, I agree that if it is solidly attached to the blank it might dampen the "feel" slightly. So the object of the game is to use a hood that does not come into direct contact with the blank when the reel is secured in place. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods Rod, When your hand or fingers rest on the hood, wouldn't you loose sensitivity because it is not directly in contact with the blank? Jack ~~ Jack Dalzell http://secretweaponlures.com/jdbass/jdhome.htm http://www.OutdoorFrontiers.com ~~ |
#6
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I'm talking about a finger being in direct contact with the rod blank. No
hood, attached or detached, could rival that kind of sensitivity... Warren ""The Shadow"" wrote in message ... Absolutely Jack. Which is why my right hand remains in contact with the "reelseat" . As I said if the cork hood is bonded to the blank , you could experience a reduction in sensitivity. But the hoods that we use are not glued to the blank. They are glued to a 100% graphite hood which locks the reelseat in. This hood itself never touches the blank. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods "Jack Dalzell Jr." wrote in message ... \"The Shadow\" wrote: Warren, again I read marketing hype in that article. As to the cork foregrip, I agree that if it is solidly attached to the blank it might dampen the "feel" slightly. So the object of the game is to use a hood that does not come into direct contact with the blank when the reel is secured in place. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods Rod, When your hand or fingers rest on the hood, wouldn't you loose sensitivity because it is not directly in contact with the blank? Jack ~~ Jack Dalzell http://secretweaponlures.com/jdbass/jdhome.htm http://www.OutdoorFrontiers.com ~~ |
#7
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Warren, as you know I use thru blank reelseats ( yeah I know so do most
others.) With our reelseats the blank is also exposed on the underside of the reelseat ( again I realize most others are) . The point I am trying to make is that I can always have some part of my hand in direct contact with the blank. When someone comes along and tries to tell me that they heighten the feel from using a locking hood like on the Kistler rods , I will tell them politely no thanks. It's hype, a marketing ploy. All they really did was take a stock reelseat and shortened it so there are no threads exposed in front of the hood. They add a winding check to hide any gap between the inside diameter of the seat and the outside diameter of the blank. All things considered this is not new stuff, custom builders have been doing these things for eons. Warren if you had ever taken a look at my flippen stick you would have noticed how short a foregrip it has. And I used the same components for it as I do every rod I build. In this case I simply took my saw to the parts! -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I'm talking about a finger being in direct contact with the rod blank. No hood, attached or detached, could rival that kind of sensitivity... Warren ""The Shadow"" wrote in message ... Absolutely Jack. Which is why my right hand remains in contact with the "reelseat" . As I said if the cork hood is bonded to the blank , you could experience a reduction in sensitivity. But the hoods that we use are not glued to the blank. They are glued to a 100% graphite hood which locks the reelseat in. This hood itself never touches the blank. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods "Jack Dalzell Jr." wrote in message ... \"The Shadow\" wrote: Warren, again I read marketing hype in that article. As to the cork foregrip, I agree that if it is solidly attached to the blank it might dampen the "feel" slightly. So the object of the game is to use a hood that does not come into direct contact with the blank when the reel is secured in place. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods Rod, When your hand or fingers rest on the hood, wouldn't you loose sensitivity because it is not directly in contact with the blank? Jack ~~ Jack Dalzell http://secretweaponlures.com/jdbass/jdhome.htm http://www.OutdoorFrontiers.com ~~ |
#8
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![]() Maybe me. about 35 years ago I chucked big Rebels for stripers in the sloughs of SF bay. Behind the Oakland Faders offices. Big glass spinner, and Mitchell 300 reel. One day, a guy let me use is Fenwick for a few minutes. Love at first throw. I still use the Fenwick steelhead rod I bought shortly thereafter. Bill ===== Bill, about that same time I was using a Mitchel 300 and fishing off the rock jetties on Alameda Air Station for thos stripers...we could have been just a few miles apart enjoying the day, hu? That old Mitchel 300 is still in my garage. I used it in Florida to surf fish...caught some really big "Reds" with 20# test and a 14' custom made surf rod, even landed a 150# black tip shark with the same set up, took an hour, but what fun. That old Mitchel 300 was one hell of a reel in it's day! JK |
#9
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I suspect, they may be using one of the newer classes of Fiberglass. When I
was talking with Gary Loomis (and I have the whole conversation on tape), he indicated that some of Today's high tech glasses were in fact more sensitive, stronger, and lighter than most graphites. But the word Glass would kill the value of these rods because so much marketing went into the promotion of graphite and how it was better than glass. Personally, I think it would be killer to have the sensitivity and stiffness of graphite and the durability and strength of a glass. But I can understand their reasoning. Imagine the reaction from the GP and the industry that just spent 10 years convincing everybody that graphite is superior, now spins around and says, "Wait, the new high tech glass rods are better than graphite." Most would think that it is just a ploy to sell more rods. -- Craig Baugher |
#10
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I know the type of reel seat you're speaking of, and when I'm palming the
reel my fingers don't contact the blank (which is exposed only below the reel) at all. My fingers are totally on the reel, with my index finger contacting the rod in front of the reel only. Warren ""The Shadow"" wrote in message ... Warren, as you know I use thru blank reelseats ( yeah I know so do most others.) With our reelseats the blank is also exposed on the underside of the reelseat ( again I realize most others are) . The point I am trying to make is that I can always have some part of my hand in direct contact with the blank. When someone comes along and tries to tell me that they heighten the feel from using a locking hood like on the Kistler rods , I will tell them politely no thanks. It's hype, a marketing ploy. All they really did was take a stock reelseat and shortened it so there are no threads exposed in front of the hood. They add a winding check to hide any gap between the inside diameter of the seat and the outside diameter of the blank. All things considered this is not new stuff, custom builders have been doing these things for eons. Warren if you had ever taken a look at my flippen stick you would have noticed how short a foregrip it has. And I used the same components for it as I do every rod I build. In this case I simply took my saw to the parts! -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I'm talking about a finger being in direct contact with the rod blank. No hood, attached or detached, could rival that kind of sensitivity... Warren ""The Shadow"" wrote in message ... Absolutely Jack. Which is why my right hand remains in contact with the "reelseat" . As I said if the cork hood is bonded to the blank , you could experience a reduction in sensitivity. But the hoods that we use are not glued to the blank. They are glued to a 100% graphite hood which locks the reelseat in. This hood itself never touches the blank. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods "Jack Dalzell Jr." wrote in message ... \"The Shadow\" wrote: Warren, again I read marketing hype in that article. As to the cork foregrip, I agree that if it is solidly attached to the blank it might dampen the "feel" slightly. So the object of the game is to use a hood that does not come into direct contact with the blank when the reel is secured in place. -- "The Shadow" Millennium Rods Rod, When your hand or fingers rest on the hood, wouldn't you loose sensitivity because it is not directly in contact with the blank? Jack ~~ Jack Dalzell http://secretweaponlures.com/jdbass/jdhome.htm http://www.OutdoorFrontiers.com ~~ |
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