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Fly Rod
FLY- ROD CASTING TECHNIQUES LURES TACKLE
FLY- ROD CASTING TECHNIQUES LURES TACKLE
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$4.99 USD
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$4.99 USD
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Past experience and manufacturers' accepted standards may serve as a rule of thumb in the classification of rods. In reality, no strict standards as regards lengths and weights are reasonable, since the rod cannot be considered alone. Any rod will perform according to the limits which the line imposes on it. A class-A rod throughout, regardless of its price tag and trappings, will be a miserable thing with a line too light or too heavy. About the only effective comparison I can think of is putting a twenty-five-horsepower outboard motor on a tiny skiff or a small one-and-one-half horsepower on a thirty-foot cruiser. It just won't work.
Rods should not be pushed beyond their reasonable endurance limits. A single day astream may require several thousand complete casting cycles. Casting a line too heavy, or a lure, for that matter, will place the rod under extreme pressures. It cannot last long. Always seek the rodbuilder's recommendation as to line size, either level or tapered, or torpedo head. That, at least, is a sound starting point.
It is not intended by any means to set down here the proper rod for a particular fish or fishing condition. Keep in mind that actions are not necessarily determined by lengths and weights. One nine-foot rod of five ounces may have a soggy, weak action, another of the same length and an ounce less weight may be on the quick, snappy side. Quality of cane and method of production make the difference.
Rods should not be pushed beyond their reasonable endurance limits. A single day astream may require several thousand complete casting cycles. Casting a line too heavy, or a lure, for that matter, will place the rod under extreme pressures. It cannot last long. Always seek the rodbuilder's recommendation as to line size, either level or tapered, or torpedo head. That, at least, is a sound starting point.
It is not intended by any means to set down here the proper rod for a particular fish or fishing condition. Keep in mind that actions are not necessarily determined by lengths and weights. One nine-foot rod of five ounces may have a soggy, weak action, another of the same length and an ounce less weight may be on the quick, snappy side. Quality of cane and method of production make the difference.
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