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Big Hands

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Everything posted by Big Hands

  1. I have a Curado DC and an SLX DC. I have yet to find anything a DC reel excels at I use an SLX 70 MGL for jerkbaits.
  2. 12 lbs 14 oz I have a video clip, but I haven't been able to resize it, so a screen grab it is. Those were the days my friend, We thought they'd never end.
  3. Do you ever fish at Lake Lahontan? I haven't fished there for. . . . let's just say it has been a long, long time. The last time I fished there was the week that Richard Nixon resigned as President. I'm laughing as I type this, so everyone else may as well too. Still, I remember there being some really good fishing there for many species, including bass.
  4. For $10 more, as long as the extra 1/2 oz doesn't bother you (with regard to balance), I would go with a JDM Ultegra 2500SHG. My two big non-starters are balance and shallow spool. The better line lay potential is a bonus, along with a few other bullet points that don't mean as much to me if I can't get past the important (to me) stuff.
  5. SLX, very similar intent and action, paired with an SLX 7 MGL. I have been trying to determine if the Expride B is similar to the Expride A, but haven't yet got my hands on one.
  6. I'd get a line counter (I have one). Reel manufacturers line capacities are all over the place and mostly unreliable without being able to verify it.
  7. Three inches off the tip of an extra fast tip? That's going to be a 7'1" medium power rod with an extra, extra fast tip. That would be a no from me, Dawg.
  8. I've had two Curado BFS, and I still have one. With a bare spool weight of 11g, I just don't consider it a true BFS reel. IMHO, it's more of a 'BFS adjacent' offering. Perfect for 6-8 lbs monofilament with 1/4 ounce or heavier baits at the lightest. With 5/16 oz to 3/8 oz being centered in it's wheelhouse. Again, JMHO.
  9. I have three mod-fast cranking rods that are 7'4", 7'6" and 7'6". I wouldn't change the length if I could. The 7'4" is a little beefier and I use a Curado 200K on it, and smaller reels on the other two. To me, 100 and 150 size baitcasters are generally interchangeable as far as sizing goes. My jerkbait rod is 6'10", but I don't really consider that a crankbait rod per se.
  10. One of the best (bass included) anglers I have ever known (heck, his wife and two sons are as well) swore by a pocket fisherman for some of his more clandestine adventures. He used to compete in baitcasting contests and could cast slingshot style from behind his back with amazing accuracy. Top shelf machinist, gunsmith, and hunter too. Or, I could just say. . . he was from Texas.
  11. That's about where I would at least begin my search. 2000 shallow spool reels should have all the capacity you need, and not much extra capacity that you don't need. After that, I would be looking at balance, and you won't really know that until you get one in your hands, or a reel that weighs close to the same. To me, even an ounce of reel weight makes a significant difference on a rod like that.
  12. I have the KK Zephyr BFS and the Kestrel BFS. They both cast 1/4 oz or less better than my Curado BFS ever dreamed of with 6 lb line. If I wanted a third BFS reel, I'd get another Kestrel BFS in a heartbeat. They were less than $100 a week a go direct from KK. No telling about the durability, especially with the Kestrel BFS because it's not been out that long. I have the Kestrel BFS on a Phenix Classic BFS rod and the combo weighs 8.5 oz for the rod and reel.
  13. Interesting thought that I hadn't considered. I do, after all, have . . . . 'big hands'.
  14. Just like the title says, when using my SLX MGL 70 with 8 lbs monofilament on the SLXCX610MXF casting rod, I notice the drag seems to back off after several casts and I have to re-adjust it several times over the course of a day. I do snap it pretty firmly when fishing jerkbaits, but I can't figure out why that would back off the drag. Everything else seems to function properly and it's an otherwise great reel. Anyone else have something similar happen?
  15. Those kind of "rules" are meant to be broken. If bass always followed the rules, it wouldn't be so intriguing to catch them reliably.
  16. I 100% agree with this. There are many reels that will do a fine job of doing the job a reel is supposed to do. Given that #1 is generally true, especially considering the level of investment that an NRX+ demands, my #1 priority would be balance. I'd much rather fish with a rod that costs half as much with a decent reel that feels that's properly balanced than fish an NRX+ 852s with ANY rod/reel combo that's not balanced. And my next priority would be to double check the balance. Once that has been verified, I will consider the rest of the details. If you had the rod in hand, you could take it with you to shop for a reel.
  17. Back in the early 90's when Castaic was in it's prime, the local lake volunteer group said the DFG was looking for a volunteer that is familiar with lake to go out with them at night on their electro-shocking boat. I couldn't raise my hand fast enough to put it mildly. They also put me to work manning one of the foot pedals (they use two so one person cannot accidentally energize the booms) and the net. We shocked up several different species and brought them aboard so they could weigh them and take scale samples. Toward the end of the night we went quite a ways back in a cove we call Dry Gulch and shocked up a Castaic Teeny-bopper. The net they had was super shallow, kinda like the net they use at the bait barges in the harbors to give you a "scoop" of anchovies. Well, once I scooped her out of the water, she snapped out of her stupor and used that shallow net like a springboard to escape. The crew of biologists said they had never shocked up one of that size before. It was a fun night and interesting to see their process, but I wished we could have brought that toad on board.
  18. I have a rod similar to your Rod #2 (mine is a Daiwa Elite Randy Howell 7'4" MHMF) that I run with 15 lbs mono for bigger topwater plugs like Zara Spooks, 117 Gunfish, Dartwing 125, Pop-Max, as well as Flashy Swimmers and bigger crankbaits or spinnerbaits. I have tried several reels on it including the Tatula Elite SV TWS, and the Shimano Curado 200K is the reel I like best. . . by a long shot. The Tatula Elite SV TWS is one of the most expensive reels I own. The build quality is very good. I tried it with rods from ML/F to H/F and many in between, with 6 lbs mono to 50 lbs braid, and as much as I wanted to love it, I just don't.
  19. Have you been to Bois d'Ark yet?
  20. "Shorter" boats and fishing with more than just you are not ideal. With two young sons on lakes like Hartwell and Keowee, I would definitely be looking at larger boats. It will be more expensive in every way, but it'll be a much nicer and safer user experience. As mentioned, if you have the budget to buy, maintain, operate and store it, it'd be my suggestion to go bigger.
  21. This is the boat I have with a 40 hp tiller. It's been a great boat for me. I found one with 2 hours on the motor for $6,800, but I had to drive to TX to get it (I honestly didn't mind, LOL). ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Since you mentioned rod locker being something you'd want, I suggest taking a looking a look at the 1654 Sportsman T. It's got a rod locker built in one side, and a general purpose locker that IIRC is removable on the other side. Not sure if they sell it sans motor. It is nicely rigged and laid out IMHO.
  22. I have a Shimano SLX 6'10" M/XF casting rod and a Daiwa Kage 6'10" M/F rod that are both marketed as jerkbait rods and both work very well for that purpose. I prefer the casting rod, but it can be a little tricky if I have to cast into the wind. They're the shortest rods I have in my starting lineup. Everything else is 7' or longer. I don't think I could find a better budget jerkbait rod for the money ($99.99 MSRP) than the SLXCX610MA.
  23. Interesting. . . My hands are a glove size 11-12. The hand I palm my reel with is 10-1/4" from thumb tip to pinky tip, and the SLX 70 MGL is the exact reel I have on my jerkbait rod. Bottom line is to use what feels good and works.
  24. The 1/4 DOOON spinnerbaits are $12-$13. The 1.5 oz Megalo DOOON goes for $27 on the JDM site I saw. A garbage fast food meal goes for $12-$15. I caught 22 bass in an hour and a half on a $25 jerkbait, and I still have it (although it does now need a little tuning, LOL). Maybe I could have done the same on a $10 jerkbait. Maybe. I'm throwing hardbaits a lot more this year, and I don't seem to be spending as much as when I was mowing through bags of Senkos, hooks, and o-rings. So long as I don't bury the hook in a submerged tree, I can fish a spinnerbait for quite a while when they're well made. The thought of a $35 spinnerbait kinda makes my eye twitch, but I can't promise I wouldn't be tempted. It does come with a trailer hook after all, LOL 🫣
  25. I have two Daiwa M/F (Kage and Tatula) spinning rods and a Phenix Feather M/F spinning rod (which is somewhere between a true M/F and ML/F. For finesse (not actual BFS) spinning techniques, I much prefer my Zodias 7' ML/F or the St.Croix 7'6" ML/XF Hair Jig rods with 2000 or 2500 reels (with 10 lbs braid to 6-8 lbs fluorocarbon leader). I would add my 7' Expride Light + before I used any of the M/F rods for finesse techniques.

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