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Old 07-20-2013, 04:12 PM
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Geezle Geezle is offline
 
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Default Need some rod advice

I have a lonely reel that's in need of a rod, but once again I'm not quite sure what to get.

I'm looking for a rod that'll be used mainly for small pike (< 5-6lbs) and occasionally walleye, mostly tossing cranks and occasionally pitching jigs.

I'm thinking something in the medium to medium-light power and fast action range, around 7'. I saw a couple Shimano rods that would fit the bill, but they are 'technique specific' rods for worms and jigging or some rubbish. What's up with the technique specific stuff anyway?

So if it were you, what rods would you be looking at? Gotta be 2 piece, and a casting rod. We'll say budget is $100ish, but there's a little wiggle room if it's something I really want
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Old 07-20-2013, 04:31 PM
evileddie713 evileddie713 is offline
 
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I picked up a compre a couple weeks ago. Awsome fast rod. Good backbone for the hook sets. $120 rod but its worth it. Its a medium heavey 6'8" rod but was catching small jack at mayatan with it one day just casting small cranks and the next weekend was trolling big rapalas at wab.
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Old 07-20-2013, 04:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by evileddie713 View Post
I picked up a compre a couple weeks ago. Awsome fast rod. Good backbone for the hook sets. $120 rod but its worth it. Its a medium heavey 6'8" rod but was catching small jack at mayatan with it one day just casting small cranks and the next weekend was trolling big rapalas at wab.
I actually have that same rod all rigged up for Wab already, and really enjoy it!

I'm looking for something a little lighter to replace my old 6'6" Shimano Sojourn for the smaller stuff though. There's nothing actually wrong with the sojourn but I'd kinda like something a little longer and more sensitive

That being said a lighter Compre wouldn't be out of the question, but the only one I saw was the worm & jig one
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Old 07-20-2013, 04:43 PM
crosbyfan123 crosbyfan123 is offline
 
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One word Gloomis
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Old 07-20-2013, 04:47 PM
Wesr Wesr is offline
 
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i picked up an ultralite last year and haven't looked back... i chose a st croix avid series.. bit more than youre looking to spend but fenwick makes a nice little rod i woudl suggest a 6' light. i want to pick one up just to close that gap between my rods a bit.
ive been converted to as ultra light. it turns even the little guys into a fun fight.

i think a decent fenwick is in the $60-80 range

good luck

lighter is always getter in my opinion
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Old 07-20-2013, 05:01 PM
jeprli jeprli is offline
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Shimano clarus 8'6(salmon/steelhead) up to 1oz, awesome rod for what you want to do. Had mine for about 10 years, bought a bunch of different rods since then, but its still my favorite. Guide wraps are a bit cracked now but other than that its still in perfect condition. It's fast enough to feel your jig properly and has enough give for even the smallest crankbaits.
Casts a mile as well and very precisely.
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Old 07-20-2013, 05:37 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Wesr View Post
i picked up an ultralite last year and haven't looked back... i chose a st croix avid series.. bit more than youre looking to spend but fenwick makes a nice little rod i woudl suggest a 6' light. i want to pick one up just to close that gap between my rods a bit.
ive been converted to as ultra light. it turns even the little guys into a fun fight.

i think a decent fenwick is in the $60-80 range

good luck

lighter is always getter in my opinion
Quote:
Originally Posted by jeprli View Post
Shimano clarus 8'6(salmon/steelhead) up to 1oz, awesome rod for what you want to do. Had mine for about 10 years, bought a bunch of different rods since then, but its still my favorite. Guide wraps are a bit cracked now but other than that its still in perfect condition. It's fast enough to feel your jig properly and has enough give for even the smallest crankbaits.
Casts a mile as well and very precisely.
Interesting to see the different opinions...Wesr suggests shorter and lighter, and jeprli suggests longer and heavier.

Reasons?

I actually have an 8'6" salmon/steelhead Clarus, but I've really only ever used it for bait fishing from shore on the NSR. It seems like a lot more rod than I need for chucking cranks from my little tinner?
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Old 07-20-2013, 05:39 PM
FishHunterPro FishHunterPro is offline
 
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I like my st croix eyecon , ml 6'6" 2 piece. It's about that price. I bought the jig n rig and it seems to be good for casting , trolling and jig n rigging lol. Paired it with a shimano sustain 2500fg. They just came out with a casting model in this series this year so have a look at them.
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Old 07-20-2013, 06:16 PM
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St.Croix Premier Spinning Rod ($130)

7ft medium light - fast action

Comes in one piece or two piece.

http://www.stcroixrods.com/product/premier-spinning

Best rod I own - I use it for exactly the application you are describing (Walleye and average Pike).
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  #10  
Old 07-20-2013, 06:22 PM
huntsfurfish huntsfurfish is offline
 
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Just cuz it says jigging rod doesn't mean you cant use it for something else.

Just means its best for that type of fishing. You know like a downrigger rod is best for downrigging
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  #11  
Old 07-20-2013, 08:20 PM
jeprli jeprli is offline
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From a boat it might be a bit long, for shore fishing just perfect. I don't find it to be heavy, i'm about 6 ft 180lb and it doesn't bother me casting all day long. But we all have preferences, and this is what i like to carry around.

If you don't mind me asking how old is your clarus? if you're interested in a trade or sale...
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Old 07-20-2013, 08:24 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jeprli View Post
From a boat it might be a bit long, for shore fishing just perfect. I don't find it to be heavy, i'm about 6 ft 180lb and it doesn't bother me casting all day long. But we all have preferences, and this is what i like to carry around.

If you don't mind me asking how old is your clarus? if you're interested in a trade or sale...
When I say heavy I'm referring to the rod's power, not its physical weight

My clarus is about 3 years old...and there's no chance I'll trade or sell it! That being said, TFH South has a couple discontinued 8'6" Clarus salmon/steelhead rods still in stock.
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Old 07-20-2013, 08:28 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by huntsfurfish View Post
Just cuz it says jigging rod doesn't mean you cant use it for something else.

Just means its best for that type of fishing. You know like a downrigger rod is best for downrigging
That's true - I use my 8'-6" St.Croix wild river rod in lakes all the time ...... lol
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Old 07-20-2013, 08:40 PM
jeprli jeprli is offline
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I think its medium heavy power but i could be wrong, thanks for the heads up, ill check tfh in calgary and see if they have one. I got a spinning rod, but would like a baitcaster of same specification. It is a bit of a broom stick in the bottom end, but the right fish will get a good bend in it without a problem.
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Old 07-20-2013, 09:49 PM
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The rod I have my eye on is St. Croix's AVC70MHM, it is from their Avid series and is 7' one piece medium heavy power moderate action and only 4.1 ounces. Lure weight rating is 3/8 - 1 ounce. They call it a crankbait rod which are almost always moderate action. I haven't tried one yet but my mind is pretty much made up that my next rod is going to be a moderate action because I find fast action casting rods are too stiff(spinning rods don't seem to be near as stiff for some reason). I prefer trolling so that is part of the reason I would like moderate action but I also think it will help with loading up the rod while casting(hard to load a MH fast action rod with a 1/2 oz lure) and will make fighting fish easier. I have done some research on this rod and anyone that has one seems to be very happy with it.

They also have a medium power rod but is only rated 1/4-5/8 oz but the majority of the lures I use for smaller Pike/Walleye are in the 1/2 to 1 oz range.
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Old 07-20-2013, 10:24 PM
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For normal circumstances, like Geezle mentioned (walleye and some average pike) a medium light is fine and a medium is plenty.

Medium heavy is overkill for this application I think. He has heavier gear for fighting pike and trolling big hardware.
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Old 07-20-2013, 10:49 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EZM View Post
For normal circumstances, like Geezle mentioned (walleye and some average pike) a medium light is fine and a medium is plenty.

Medium heavy is overkill for this application I think. He has heavier gear for fighting pike and trolling big hardware.
You're right, I've got the heavy gear more than covered already...now I'm looking for a ML to M rod for some of the smaller stuff that's too big to realistically go after with the UL.
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Old 07-21-2013, 07:58 AM
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I have 4 ugly stiks in various models for casting, trolling, jigging and love them all. Great price, great action, great durability.
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  #19  
Old 07-21-2013, 09:32 AM
NSRfishing NSRfishing is offline
 
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http://templeforkoutfitters.ca/conve...ning-a-casting

i like my 7 ft medium light tfo rod moderate action good sensitive
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Old 07-21-2013, 10:02 AM
Pikebreath Pikebreath is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NSRfishing View Post
http://templeforkoutfitters.ca/conve...ning-a-casting

i like my 7 ft medium light tfo rod moderate action good sensitive
I have this rod as well and it is sweet. The whole Gary Loomis TFO series of spin and gear rods are worth looking into.
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  #21  
Old 07-21-2013, 02:37 PM
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Graffy91 Graffy91 is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Geezle View Post
I have a lonely reel that's in need of a rod, but once again I'm not quite sure what to get.

I'm looking for a rod that'll be used mainly for small pike (< 5-6lbs) and occasionally walleye, mostly tossing cranks and occasionally pitching jigs.

I'm thinking something in the medium to medium-light power and fast action range, around 7'. I saw a couple Shimano rods that would fit the bill, but they are 'technique specific' rods for worms and jigging or some rubbish. What's up with the technique specific stuff anyway?

So if it were you, what rods would you be looking at? Gotta be 2 piece, and a casting rod. We'll say budget is $100ish, but there's a little wiggle room if it's something I really want
Hey Jay,

This is what I am currently using and I am absolutely in love with it.

I first tried a fenwick ice fishing this year the EliteTech, I couldn't believe the quality for the price.

http://www.fenwickfishing.com/prod.p...0%281202098%29

Thats what I use, whether its bottom bouncing, jigging, tossing cranks @ Wab or using it in the river it is definitely the most versatile rod I've ever bought. At the $64.99 with a 5 year warranty you cannot go wrong.
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Old 07-21-2013, 05:57 PM
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Worm and jig rod will work for what you want to do. Obviously go with Shimano I love the compre's best rods for the price imo. I have a few compre's my favorite is my 6' medium, extra fast so sensitive and will handle any walleye here and I have landed big pike on it just have your drag set correctly and you are good to go.
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Old 07-21-2013, 06:46 PM
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pikergolf pikergolf is offline
 
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First and most important question, what kind of line?
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Old 07-21-2013, 09:37 PM
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Geezle Geezle is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by justinO View Post
Worm and jig rod will work for what you want to do. Obviously go with Shimano I love the compre's best rods for the price imo. I have a few compre's my favorite is my 6' medium, extra fast so sensitive and will handle any walleye here and I have landed big pike on it just have your drag set correctly and you are good to go.
Well now that you mention it, I do have a preference towards Shimano gear The orphaned reel that needs a rod is a shimano Caenan that got booted off my MH Compre when I got my Curado.

That being said, the Compre, Clarus and maaaaaaybe the Convergence are options...it'll likely end up coming down to what I find in stock first in the right power/action/length at this point!
-
Quote:
Originally Posted by Graffy91 View Post
Hey Jay,

This is what I am currently using and I am absolutely in love with it.

I first tried a fenwick ice fishing this year the EliteTech, I couldn't believe the quality for the price.

http://www.fenwickfishing.com/prod.p...0%281202098%29

Thats what I use, whether its bottom bouncing, jigging, tossing cranks @ Wab or using it in the river it is definitely the most versatile rod I've ever bought. At the $64.99 with a 5 year warranty you cannot go wrong.
Unfortunately the only casting model of that rod is 6'6" MH...and lifetime warranty trumps 5 year
Quote:
Originally Posted by pikergolf View Post
First and most important question, what kind of line?
Why is that most important?

It'll likely get 20 lb PowerPro.
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Old 07-21-2013, 09:51 PM
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I was just looking on the Shimano website and I see that both the Compre ans Clarus are available in a 7' medium/medium fast crank bait rod...I'm sure I could get TFH to bring one in for me...
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  #26  
Old 07-22-2013, 01:27 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Geezle View Post
Well now that you mention it, I do have a preference towards Shimano gear The orphaned reel that needs a rod is a shimano Caenan that got booted off my MH Compre when I got my Curado.

That being said, the Compre, Clarus and maaaaaaybe the Convergence are options...it'll likely end up coming down to what I find in stock first in the right power/action/length at this point!
-


Unfortunately the only casting model of that rod is 6'6" MH...and lifetime warranty trumps 5 year


Why is that most important?

It'll likely get 20 lb PowerPro.
Braided makes your rod a feel whole lot more sensitive. If your rod is too stiff and fast for braid it will cost you fish. I would go to the softer slower side of what you are considering for braid, if you were going to use a mono which has a lot of stretch, I would go with the stiffer rods you are considering.
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Old 07-22-2013, 08:16 AM
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Geezle Geezle is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pikergolf View Post
Braided makes your rod a feel whole lot more sensitive. If your rod is too stiff and fast for braid it will cost you fish. I would go to the softer slower side of what you are considering for braid, if you were going to use a mono which has a lot of stretch, I would go with the stiffer rods you are considering.
I wholeheartedly disagree. If that were the case then from what you're describing I'd be losing a lot of fish on the main rods that I use, which are both MH/XFast.

Ever try chucking hardware with a baitcast rod with a soft tip? When that tip snaps back after the cast it can cause your reel to do bad things to your line
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  #28  
Old 07-22-2013, 08:24 AM
Mikezilk Mikezilk is offline
 
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Pick up a Fenwick HMX. right around 90 and great for pike.. I was hauling in hammer handles all the way up to 32" on it on Wab one day and loved it.

Fishin Hole has em.
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Old 07-22-2013, 09:51 AM
Walleyedude Walleyedude is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Geezle View Post
I was just looking on the Shimano website and I see that both the Compre ans Clarus are available in a 7' medium/medium fast crank bait rod...I'm sure I could get TFH to bring one in for me...
You have your answer. Great rod for what you've described.

If you're willing to wait a bit, I'm sure they can have one included in their next shipment of rods at no cost to you.
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  #30  
Old 07-22-2013, 11:40 AM
mikebossy mikebossy is offline
 
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Ron Popeil's Pocket Fisherman! I just saw the infomercial on youtube, and i'm pretty sure it has all the qualities your looking for, especially storage in the tinner, takes up little to no room. Heard Shimano is helping with development of an RPPF #2 with all the features of the original but with an additional 2 inches of length (check with JustinO, he's got serious insider Shimano cred'). Now that 2 inches doesn't sound like alot, but ask a lady like Fishergrrl and she'll tell u right out, 2 extra inches often makes all the difference, changing what felt like an ordinary ohhh cast to an ahhhhhhh cast!
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