Have you looked at the US Reels? They have a wide spool that can assist in casting the lighter lures with less snags. Looked at one last night and it was impressive. I think the high end reel ran about $180?

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Have you looked at the US Reels? They have a wide spool that can assist in casting the lighter lures with less snags. Looked at one last night and it was impressive. I think the high end reel ran about $180?
i would go with a medium rod i like the gloomis gl2 or gl3 and definately go with an okuma reel they are fairly inexpensive adn i would put anyone of my okumas up against other reel they spool off line easy got a great drag and u can pick them up at lake cumberland outdoors or sportsmans warehouse for around 40 to 70 dollars depending on which one u get.....
I don't have and Loomis spinning rods but do love my 2 Loomis baitcaster rods, but my buddy has a Loomis spinning rod and it feels great. For the money, Okuma reels are excellent so Ryan ekubass is right on in is post. Look into a 6'6" Loomis rod Medium to Medium/Heavy action with a fast tip rigged with an Okuma reel and you will be in business for just about anything short of flipping heavy cover.
I would have to say go with a loomis med and the Shimano Stradic® 2500MgFB. I have a ST1000 on a light loomis i use for crappie and and skips. I was fishing At cannelton **** for skips last fall, while reeling in some bait a 17 pound striper came up and hit the bait fish. I was only using 4 pound P-line and was able to land the striper, took 35 mins (lol) but the light wieght gear handled that nice fish. I dont think you could go wrong with Shimano reels and a loomis rod, but that is just my thaughts. Good luck and let us know what you decide on.
Chris
G-loomis is obviously the higher end, its all about what you are wanting to put in it.
They make a Senko spinning rod that is designed for exactly what you are wanting to do. It is 7'1" Medium power with an ex-fast action, rated for 1/8- 3/8 oz baits and 6-12# line.
It is a BSR852, and you can get the mossyback version or GLX (lighter, more sensitive, titanium recoil guides, more $$)
A 2500 Shimano will be great for that rod. The Saros and higher models have a new line propulsion management system that is new for their '08 reels and is supposed to increase casting distance with less twist.
If that is a little out of your price range, any shimano 2500 and any Shimano or St. Croix rod about a 6'6" - 7' medium would be just right, i'd say.
Last edited by AJM; 02-28-2008 at 11:24 AM.
i appreciate the feedback, i am going to run by gander tonight and look at some of the products mentioned... i have not ever used a us reel but have heard good things about them and will definatley look into it... the v-system okuma reels look good and i like the 5 yr warrenty... the stella fd looks good also, going to have a tough choice here
rods... i am a big kistler fan and understand the importance of a good rod, my question is, is there a considerable difference in the imx, the glx, and the gl3? there is an obvious price difference but is it worth it? i am not worried about the weight, so what makes the high end so much better? i think the gl3 would be a much more versitle rod but will it throw a weightless worm?, i think the gl2 is what i am actually needing, but if the gl3 will throw something that light, i would much rather have it for handling larger baits
so gl2 or gl3 and standard, imx, or glx? standard gl3 $155, imx $245, or glx $350
any other ideas? i am still open to anything
If you can swing the payment on the GLX you won’t regret it. I am a big bait caster guy as well but I bought a spinning rig 2 years ago for small mouth and I have a hard time putting it down now. I have a GLX 7’6” Medium Fast Action 8-17lb ¼-5/8 (SJR902) and it rocks in fact I am going to buy another. The real I use on it is the Shimano Sustain 2500 and it works really well. I had a Stella before and donated that along with a GLX to Detroit River after 2 weeks (expensive mistake) but for its money you can’t beat the Sustain. I have caught bass, salmon in northern Mi 8-20lb, and stripers down here up to 23lb and never lost them. The heaviest I have used is 14lb but normally 10-12 lb and that extra length will absorb a lot allowing you to run smaller line if you want. For 3-6lb smallies it is the best rod you will ever use.
I have 14 GLX models and one GL2 that I dont use, there is a difference.
The different models is the different graphite used. Is it worth the difference? Most that have used the GLX would say yes, others who have just used the Mossyback, GL2, GL3-- would probably say no, because they are great rods too.
The GLX graphite is the most senstive, lightweight graphite ever used, and they have added the Titanium Recoil guides on some models, and that is also lighter and more senstive.
The G-Loomis Mossyback rod is a great rod, and they are very popular. You can get the BSR852 Senko Rod mentioned aboved for $230, the GLX in the same exact stlye is $370. Both would be VERY versatile. They are essentially a 7'1" Medium power, light weight and senstive spinning rod.
I think you would like the 7" 1" senko rod and The Okuma reel is hard to beat I have 4 or 5 of them with the oldest being aqbout seven years and never had a problem with any of them. I have the Epixor and the Alumina.The different models is the different graphite used. Is it worth the difference? Most that have used the GLX would say yes, others who have just used the Mossyback, GL2, GL3-- would probably say no, because they are great rods too.
The GLX graphite is the most senstive, lightweight graphite ever used, and they have added the Titanium Recoil guides on some models, and that is also lighter and more senstive.
The G-Loomis Mossyback rod is a great rod, and they are very popular. You can get the BSR852 Senko Rod mentioned aboved for $230, the GLX in the same exact stlye is $370. Both would be VERY versatile. They are essentially a 7'1" Medium power, light weight and senstive spinning rod.
gander didn't have that many choices believe it or not, mostly the same shimanos on combos with different rods, but i did find a few stradics and really liked them... now i remember why i don't like spinning gear, i could not find a rod in the store that suited me, i looked at the loomis and st croix, not a very big selection but i was not impressed(there were no glx loomis spinning rods), they did have 2 or 3 kistlers i liked but they were medium action and only 6' and i have pretty well decided on a mh (6'6"+) if i am going to buy a new rod... i am still looking for a rod so any one with suggestions feel free or anyone wanting to sell a glx or kistler give me a pm
G-loomis is obviously the higher end, its all about what you are wanting to put in it.
They make a Senko spinning rod that is designed for exactly what you are wanting to do. It is 7'1" Medium power with an ex-fast action, rated for 1/8- 3/8 oz baits and 6-12# line.
It is a BSR852, and you can get the mossyback version or GLX (lighter, more sensitive, titanium recoil guides, more $$)
A 2500 Shimano will be great for that rod. The Saros and higher models have a new line propulsion management system that is new for their '08 reels and is supposed to increase casting distance with less twist.
If that is a little out of your price range, any shimano 2500 and any Shimano or St. Croix rod about a 6'6" - 7' medium would be just right, i'd say.
I fish 4 and 5 inch Yum Dinger/senkos on the BSR852 GLX with a Stradic 2500 reel. The BSR852 GLX may be the best finesse rod on the planet and I mean that is a real possibility. It has a very thin limber tip and a ton of backbone. Got mine on Ebay for about $240. I own stradics and US reel. Go with the Stradic, it is smoother, casts just as far and if a difference in line twist exists I can't tell it.
One less expensive thought. The Crucial dropshot rod in 6'8 or 7'1 for the money is likely the best deal you would find. It won't have the backbone of the GLX but it is very sensitive and has enough power. I know several guys who rave about this rod and I have the baitcasting version which compares favorably to my Gloomis IMX rods.
