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How Do You Rate a Rod??

"Would you like me to detail how we go about comparing a rod to other rods"?

Catskillkid ...Please...I'm very curious how this process is done when comparing rods..
 
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I am not going to respond to the name calling and back and forth bickering. This is something that fly fishing can do without. I have my opinions and you have yours. If you run into me at a show don't hesitate to stop by and introduce yourself. We can discuss this there. It would be a very interesting discussion. To be honest I don't have the time to discuss this in detail here.

Aaron
 
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To hell with fly rod action, CatskillKid has $30 million bucks from the FFing industry. Want to help fund some river restoration work for TU?:)

I'm such a funding whore.....what can I say?

All joking aside, I purchase my fly rods based on the use or uses I plan for each rod. Sometimes that might be the top of the line Sage and sometimes a much lower priced rod depending on use. Sure I wish I could own all top end fly rods for every species of fish I pursue, but that isn't the case financially and isn't going to be the case for 99% of us. Money always has to creep into any decision. If I'm going to rarely chase a certain fish but need a new rod to go after that fish, chances are very strong that my decision will weigh heavier on price than on performance. I know full well what I'm giving up, but I have to weigh everything against the amount of use and the funds at hand. But if I'm after trout and want to replace an older rod like one of my Sages or Winstons, then I'm going to buy the top of the line rod that has the action and finish that I prefer based on the style of fishing I plan to do (dries, nymphs, heavy streamers, etc.). So sometimes during my 38 years fly fishing that's been a full priced Sage and sometimes it's a pro deal rod that costs me far less...
 
To hell with fly rod action, CatskillKid has $30 million bucks from the FFing industry. Want to help fund some river restoration work for TU?:)

I'm such a funding whore.....what can I say?

All joking aside, I purchase my fly rods based on the use or uses I plan for each rod. Sometimes that might be the top of the line Sage and sometimes a much lower priced rod depending on use. Sure I wish I could own all top end fly rods for every species of fish I pursue, but that isn't the case financially and isn't going to be the case for 99% of us. Money always has to creep into any decision. If I'm going to rarely chase a certain fish but need a new rod to go after that fish, chances are very strong that my decision will weigh heavier on price than on performance. I know full well what I'm giving up, but I have to weigh everything against the amount of use and the funds at hand. But if I'm after trout and want to replace an older rod like one of my Sages or Winstons, then I'm going to buy the top of the line rod that has the action and finish that I prefer based on the style of fishing I plan to do (dries, nymphs, heavy streamers, etc.). So sometimes during my 38 years fly fishing that's been a full priced Sage and sometimes it's a pro deal rod that costs me far less...

Hi Rusty, trust me I'm VERY involved in TU and all of the local clubs in my area, we donate HUGE for every banquet and we also are a host location for antyhing the local chapters need, whenever they come in we totally take care of them. Conservation is the single biggest postive we can do for our community and on a national level you have yourself a fantastic cause.

Rusty, I wanted to take a sec. to respond to something you said in your post ok...Sure I wish I could own all top end fly rods for every species of fish I pursue, but that isn't the case financially and isn't going to be the case for 99% of us. Money always has to creep into any decision. If I'm going to rarely chase a certain fish but need a new rod to go after that fish, chances are very strong that my decision will weigh heavier on price than on performance. I know full well what I'm giving up, but I have to weigh everything against the amount of use and the funds at hand....That's why this post that I've started has the potential to be helpful to anyone who wishes to actually evaluate a rod and then choose. If you're in the market for a rod of a given length and taper, chances are comparing all rods in the given category will benefit you in selecting the rod that is right for you. So you seem reasonable Rusty. How then do you pick a rod? What sets one 9' 5 weight apart from another? How do you choose?
 
That's why this post that I've started has the potential to be helpful to anyone who wishes to actually evaluate a rod and then choose. If you're in the market for a rod of a given length and taper, chances are comparing all rods in the given category will benefit you in selecting the rod that is right for you. So you seem reasonable Rusty. How then do you pick a rod? What sets one 9' 5 weight apart from another? How do you choose?

For me personally, a 9' for 5 weight is my go to trout rod so that answer is simple. I prefer a tip flex, fast action rod and knowing I use a 9' 5 weight very often means I'm going to save up to buy the very best rod on the market that meets my criteria of performance, finish and warranty. I'm going to use the rod in windy conditions often like one finds often on the upper D as well as it needing to handle multiple nymph rigs and streamers as well as my beloved dry flies. My go to rod in this configuration happens to be a Sage. I have lesser rods as back ups, but they only collect dust and get the odd car ride to a destination river where they sit in a tube in case I do something stupid with my Sage on the trip.

But let's say I want a dry fly rod for NJ's smaller streams. Now action takes on a new meaning. I'm not in need of an 80 foot cast in windy weather to land a size 18 dry on a dime in front of a finicky wild brown that has seen it all. Chances are good that I only need 30' casts under a forest canopy, so no need for a cannon or much length either as it will only catch on overhead branches. Now I might be looking at a 7 1/2' rod in 3 weight Winston for dries and maybe an 8 or 8 1/2' for 4 weight Greys to "do it all" on local streams and rivers. My casting style on these smaller streams will not be nearly as aggressive, and I won't want that ultra fast action simply because it won't load the way I want without over-lining or forcing which I don't like to do to a rod. As soon as casting becomes "work", I know it's the wrong rod for me personally. I've mistakenly purchased some of those many, many years ago and either given them away or they sit and gather dust in my rod room.

Or maybe it's that 9' for 9 weight that I use as my back up surf rod behind my two hand 11/12 weight CND spey rod. No need to pay the big bucks, it's just a back up and my Loomis GL3 gets the job done although, truth be told, that rod's action is far too soft for my liking. But at the time I got it, I didn't know better about a 9 weight having mostly fished for trout and bass/panfish most my life prior to that purchase. Maybe one day it'll see some use on big pike, but mostly it's just my back up or loaner rod when I'm guiding a buddy new to the salt on the beach. But working for TU, I can't buy the big ticket rods any longer, even on pro forms. So price factors in a lot more than the good old days when I was selling in corporate America and the $$ was rolling in most years. These days I like to add the odd new rod now and then as I'm always in need of the newest perfect rod that I don't already own (and I own dozens). So I enjoy rods like Greys Streamflex, owning an 8 1/2' for 4 weight that is the most rod I've ever bought for the price. The finish is not that of my Sage or Winston rods, but the fish don't seem to mind and I'm comfortable with the decision to save some funds and still have an excellent fishing tool.

I guess no one criteria goes into my own rod buying decisions, each rod serves a particular purpose and the actions, length and price points vary accordingly. If $$ were not an object, then some of my choices would certainly be different, but I regret none of the rods I've bought the past 15 years or so. Every rod I've purchased in that time sees plenty of time on the water. But I don't envy the beginner who may think that money should be the sole deciding factor since we now have so much to choose from in terms of action, lengths, styles, price points, warranties, etc. Lots to learn and with the internet, everyone has an opinion which might not be right for you.
 
"Would you like me to detail how we go about comparing a rod to other rods"?

Catskillkid ...Please...I'm very curious how this process is done when comparing rods..

Hi Sneaky Pete (one of the best Bass Flies I've ever fished by the way, LOVE them). The average guy will have a far different response than I do on this point. After all, the rod they buy is the rod they want. Often, there is nothing anyone can do to sway this decision because it is based on this person's most important buying criteria having already been decided. However, what "they" buy and what is best are two entirely different things. What I'm about to share is very common in the rod building, selling and ultimately...buying....industry. It's just that to get this information, you would have to have access to countless rods, have the time and desire to test them and have the input of a staff of guides, hard-core employees who have a lifetime of experience in their own rights and a neutral objective which should be to simply state which rods are best and for what reasons.

In magazines, the publishers can't tell you this info. Yes, they can give you an Editor's Choice award to illude to which rod is best, but they can't risk having advertisers pull their funding and therefore they have to give all paying customers equal exposure and they don't DARE to make any criticism what so ever. Some think this is professional. I call it LAME but a fact of nature in the magazine business. This law shouldn't apply here. We are in a non biased forum, on the internet. I'm here by choice, prepared to tell it like it is, not as I see it. I frankly don't care what rod a person buys. To each thier own. But I do care what rod I buy and so I'd like to actually KNOW which one is best, which one next best...and so forth. So does my staff. There is nothing worse than a customer coming back unhappy. That means we lose money or lose a customer. Guides get pro sheet deals so we could care less if they whine. It's not like they paid full retail.

A rod is simply a tool to catch a fish. Any rod will work. (why do you think endorsed guides are so satisfied? They get used to products they get the best possible deals on and they work just fine) If this is all you need to know, go buy any rod and stop reading here ok. Do us ALL a favor.

However, if you'd like to actually compare available choices (which is the supposed purpose of this category of Northeast FF) and speak to which are best for ACTUAL REASONS, then let's establish an appropriate criteria that is not debatable. I have a team of expert fresh and saltwater guides and an extended community of other guides who all share to varrying degrees a valued opinion on a given rod. I also have a team of expert staff who deal with these matters on a daily basis and fish them personally in thier free time. I also have me. We all fish constantly. Some of us to eat, some of us for fun and some of us as a way of life. We have done the best possible job to establish the following criteria and we rate rods periodically for the sake of selling them, buying them personally and our passion and love of the sport. When we test a run of 25 eight weights, we have a ball. Of course, 150 of them get eliminated for various reasons, but rods worth testing deserve to be in any conversation with any customer. Here is the criteria we use to determine which rods are best:

First things first, why believe us? Yes, we have a little bit of experience, true. But I advocate you test and try for yourself. Use us as a groundwork for the 5 rods you chose. As I always say, the world is full of experts. Who needs another one. Pick the rod for the type of fishing you do, but understand what attributes rods have and what you're looking for before you pick.

Also, Understand that Lighter is Better. Period. All things being equal, this isn't debatable. If you want to pair the rod with a very heavy but pretty reel, then ignore this statement. Otherwise, we consider it to be a fact.

Most importantly, great rods aren't always expensive. You might have to lower your expectations about the quality of the cork grip or the overall finish, guides and reel seat, or possibly accept the fact that you’ll have to buy a rod case if you want one, but you can get a great rod for half the price of a comparable great rod.

Some of the best rods available don't always perform as you've been led by the manufacturer's advertising and the advice of the guides who fish these rods state (this would explain my feeling about edorsed guides not having a truly global perspective in the indurstry, and this is ok. My guess is that 25 years from now they most likely will). Many will disagree with my findings and that's ok. My hope is that the more experienced casters will see light.

Who do you think makes great rods? Great anglers. Please keep this in mind, for they know more than you or I.

I believe all comperable rods of a given rod length and taper shoud be compared against each other. To do this, we use the same reel and line when testing. Based on yearly sales numbers, the Ross CLA and either the Sci. Ang. GPX or Rio Gold Fly Lines are used in all of my tests of the medium to faster type freshwater rods. The slower rods get trout appropriate tapers, such as Rio's Trout LT or Sci Anglers Mastery Trout Taper. Each line is therefore appropriate for the rods being tested. We do use THE SAME line for all tests and our staff agrees on the line before the tests begin. Please note, we feel there are other excellent line companies, Cortland and Airflow among them. Also, please understand that 3M makes both Rio and Sci Angler's (and Orvis) lines so there isn't a revolutionary difference among the lines we select. Based on the tapers, we select lines to optimize performace and simulate what the average buyer will choose. Based on sales numbers, we pick what we feel is most likely the best to most people.

We assign the following point system to each rod tested. This is the nuts and bolts of how I ascertain which rod is best. Also, keep in mind that this information is pretty common among evaluators of rods. This info really isn't anything revolutionary or new:

Price: 10 points. Cheapest gets a ten, then so-forth. In this economy, I've considered giving this category 20 points, but I have yet to do so because I work off the belief that performance matters more than price, gaurantee, fun factor and craftsmanship.

Category X: 10 points. A combination of things like warranty, turn around time in season, level of fix, refurbishments, service without being asked (like cleaning cork or noticing other things that are wrong), section replacement or in some cases entire rod replacement. We base our ratings on the dealings we have each day with each company. Our customers and their experiences are numerous. We feel we know what we're talking about and then some on this.

Craftsmanship: 10 points. Quality of cork, finish, wraps, details, case (or lack there of), components..etc.

Ferris Beuller's Day off Factor: 10 points. How fun is the rod to fish. This is an arbitrary category that is based on emotion. I say your girlfriend gets that gift certificate to the spa and you get the rod you really want. If 10 testers, guides and staff alike, tell me a rod is fun, then it's fun. Trust me. But I still stamp it as fun myself.

Overall weight: 10 points. A special scale we use for fly inventory is used. It is accurate to .00001 of an oz. NEVER take a manufactuer's word for this category. They often falsify or weigh the 6' 3 weight to state weight. Orvis is a prime perpetrator of this, but they are by no means alone.

Swing Weight: 10 Points. I've talked about this in past posts and likened it to a golf club at the clubhouse, rods with low swing weights are very fun to fish because then seem to move back and forth during the cast with ease. You can detect swing weight right at the rod rack. Pick up a rod and try it. If it seems effortless to false cast with it, it has a very low swing weight. If it feels in the hand as if it takes effort, it has a high swing weight.

Swing Weight vs. Power: 20 Points. This is the most important performance category yet so it's double weighted. You want to know which rod is best right? WELL. Which rods feel lightest yet deliver the most power. The winners in this category are the ones that make you wish you were fishing them. This category is for all the fly fishing club guys who say, "you have to test cast the rod to really know, man!" They are right (sort of). A rod with wonderful swing weight can flunk when you cast it. Causes are it's not lined right or that it doesn't translate to actual casting.


Performance at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 feet. 20 points. Nuff Said. Most of the fishing you do is in this range. FOOLS who test cast rods before they buy them just go right to distance. I've seen it a million times. Big Mistake. I'm talking about hitting a floating disc 50 out of 50 times at each distance on a given day with variable wind conditions. Is the rod accurate? We're really measuring the performance of the tips of most rods in this category. The lighter a rod is, the easier it will be to false cast it when drying a fly. Ever stop to consider this? Really? Well it's very true. That's one reason lighter is better. Period. Can the rod flip some nymphs and some weight easily and effortlessly? Most can in this category. Add some distance and you get the next, most telling category...


Performance at 25, 35 and 45 feet. 20 points. This is considered normal fishing distance in most places of the country and world. PA nymph guys are cringing right now. Ha! I love them all. If you have to double haul to get performance in this category, either you can't cast or your rod nips the big one. Winners in this category are accurate at this distance, able to fire into the wind when needed and can handle flipping multiple nymph rigs and indicators with crisply executed roll casts. They can handle throwing streamers on sink tip lines as well. An all purpose rod SHINES in this category and deservedly so.


Performance at 50, 60, 70 and beyond feet: 20 Points. This is the category all the magazies want you to (I just shot a possum as I was typing this, huge bugger, crawled in front of my window on the river bank) believe is most important. But try hitting a floating disc at these distances 50 times in a row. Try tossing a Teeny 130 or 200 into the backing. Try launching a WF to the far bank. Try keeping 60 feet of DT line in the air as you desperately try to put a March Brown Dry on above the rise ring from the boat, in the wind. This category is for Machines only. If you're faint hearted, disregard it entirely because you'll never be able to use it so why worry about it. I've seen the best casters generally get within 3 feet on average at 90 feet in accuracy tests. After 50 casts with the wrong rod in this category, they start cursing. Usually I just laugh. Obviously, a heavy rod in this category is a complete and total drag. Talk about ugggh.

That's all I've got for you. 140 total points. The best rod is just, well...best. If you think price is worth 200 points, buy an Eagle Claw and be done with it. If you think getting a brand new rod next day delievered to you in Kamatchka is the bomb, get a Loomis and say by-by to this test. If you like to lay naked to your rod by the campfire, buy a T&T or a Winston and by all means, enjoy! If you want to experience the thrill of a blood red vintage Ferrari every time you fish, buy a Hardy or a Tom Morgan Rod Smith's. If you want to be a dirty fisherman who has the best all around performing rod, buy a Sage or a Loomis or a Tom Morgan. If you want to spend too much money for a so-so rod, see me and I'll give you lots of choices.

I'm sure that whatever rods you've convinced yourself you like, are the rods you like. This test will do nothing to change your mind. But, if your an advanced fisherman with a desire to actually put one rod against another, I hope you'll agree with me, my guides and my staff that this is the best possible test to actually determine, based on facts, which rods are better than others.
 
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FOOLS who test cast rods before they buy them just go right to distance.

My biggest pet peeve when discussing what is truly important when evaluating a new rod! Very few casts we take for any fish species are wholly dependent on the distance we can cast that rod. Accuracy/presentation are far more important. The only rod I ever purchased for distance was my CND two handed Oceanic rod, which I purposely bought to chuck a fly line with/without accuracy as far as I possibly could. That rod would be a horrific choice if I wanted to chase permit on the flats where accuracy is king, but to reach a pod of Albies that are hanging off the beach more than 100 feet, it's the perfect rod for me.
 
Thanks for all the great info.. I noticed Fly Rod Comparison Albright G. Loomis Orvis Sage Scott Temple Fork Thomas & Thomas Tom Morgan Rodsmiths R.L. Winston rod testing has the same test as you do.. Guess this is the standard way of testing rods...

Yes, there are many others in the industry that do similar tests in the interests of standardizing our evaluations. That's what I meant by saying..."We assign the following point system to each rod tested. This is the nuts and bolts of how I ascertain which rod is best. Also, keep in mind that this information is pretty common among evaluators of rods. This info really isn't anything revolutionary or new"... in my answer to your question.

Obviously, a group of unbiased, highly experienced/accomplished casters and die hard fishermen, when asked to perform standardized tests, will all generate unique results that, when averaged as a score, generally gives a fairly accurate assessment. With that said, I persaonlly participate in as many tests as I'm interested in to join and I demand that my staff conducts these test regularly in order to continue to be a leading authority on what is best and why. In the Ferris Beuller's Day Off category, the personality and emotions of the testers comes through. Not having this category however de-humanizes the test and based on the silly grins the testers always have, it would be nothing short of a travesty to eliminate this category. The question is, are the other 10 point categories equal to the Ferris category in terms of the weighted 10 points we give each? When you think of driving a vintage Ferrari that's always been kept glassed in, the answer is yes. A fly rod actually can make a person grin, smile and otherwise feel a sense of personal joy.

I noticed the post you cited detailed testers who employed master rod builders intimately associated with the rods they were testing. I nevertheless found their information to be 100 percent unbiased.


We test more than just Fly Rods by the way. For example, ever wonder which floatant is actually the best? Or which waders are the best? Or which fly reels are the best? On and on it goes. Suffice it to say that I sell more Poo-Goo, Simms Waders and Galvan Torque reels for this reason. My staff is forced to test them all and to a man (and woman), they take the results as factual information that they researched and they pass this information along to the customers. We still carry a broad assortment of other options because loyal customer bases will buy the products they are familiar with and that perform up to their expectations. Also, often times it is cost and cost alone that dictates a purchase.


On that last point, we have been laboring for over two years as to whether or not we should assign, 20, 30, 40 or 50 points to the Cost category. I've found that the more points I give the category, the results are skewed further and further from actual performance and the other categories matter less and less.

For this reason, I have yet to budge on my willingness to double weight or more the Cost category. I also have a staunch belief that an American made rod with $20 that rates as comperable should be the choice of any customer and I demand that the staff educates a customer as to this point. Ultimately, let the customer bare the responsibility of saving $20 and perpetuating the need for American Manufacturing to move over seas and exploit a forien labor pool in the name of increasing margin. I believe we do all we can do on our end and as always, the customer is not only king, but ALWAYS right (even if they really aren't).

One last point that solidifies my belief on this is that an angler decides what his budget is based on his means and to what degree he is willing to part with them. Therefore, the responsibility is his to dermine how much he's willing to pay for a product. Anglers that tend to fish more than 200 days a year and only need a few rods will usually pay more than recreational fishermen right? Wrong. There is no correlation between the way a customer looks, how much they fish, their income..etc. There just isn't a rhyme or reason to it. It's more about how they make choices, who their influences are and ultimately, it's no different than the Golf Course or the Ski Slopes. How many skiiers do you see with cruddy skiis and old, outdated clothes? How many golfers tote around their grandfathers 1975 era crap ola clubs while golfing in their sneakers? Fly Fishing is an elitist recreational sport. Most new anglers want the best value. As our philosophy openly states, cost isn't necessarily equal to value. Especially if you're willing to overlook some things.

By the same token, we get a huge laugh out knuckleheads (said good heartedly) who think that a premium rod that rates off the charts doesn't offer more than a very good performing rod that is significantly less money and then carries on that the cheaper rod is a better rod. That's one of the reasons for creating this post actually. Now that I've established how rods are rated (and blown my cover to a degree) and why one rod actually can be and IS better than another, people can determine for themselves in a much better way who has an opinion and who cites a landslide of facts before making an assessment and then DARING to say it. You can't read these types of things in magazines.
 
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This whole conversation has promted me do a little research, and now throw some more gas on the fire. Why would I pay $700 for a foreign made Hardy SINTRIX instead of $700 (assuming I had $700 to blow on a rod) on domestic made Loomis, considering both use the same 3M technology? The Hardy is going to have to cast quantifiably several orders of magnitude better than the NRS to justify this.
 
Also, Understand that Lighter is Better. Period. All things being equal, this isn't debatable.

Certainly, it's debatable. Anything's debatable when you use the word "better". All engineering is a matter of tradeoffs, and weight is one of them. If lighter means more fragile, then lighter isn't better if durability is more important to you. It's one factor.

Most importantly, great rods aren't always expensive.
Agreed.

I believe all comperable rods of a given rod length and taper shoud be compared against each other. To do this, we use the same reel and line when testing. Based on yearly sales numbers, the Ross CLA and either the Sci. Ang. GPX or Rio Gold Fly Lines are used in all of my tests of the medium to faster type freshwater rods. The slower rods get trout appropriate tapers, such as Rio's Trout LT or Sci Anglers Mastery Trout Taper. Each line is therefore appropriate for the rods being tested. We do use THE SAME line for all tests and our staff agrees on the line before the tests begin. Please note, we feel there are other excellent line companies, Cortland and Airflow among them. Also, please understand that 3M makes both Rio and Sci Angler's (and Orvis) lines so there isn't a revolutionary difference among the lines we select. Based on the tapers, we select lines to optimize performace and simulate what the average buyer will choose. Based on sales numbers, we pick what we feel is most likely the best to most people.

I don't buy into that, other than that a rod should be tested with an appropriate line and reel and that line and reel isn't going to be the same for all rods. A classic cane rod with an agate stripping guide may not cast a hard plastic line well at all, but do be great with a thinner, more supple line like Cortland Sylk.

We assign the following point system to each rod tested. This is the nuts and bolts of how I ascertain which rod is best. Also, keep in mind that this information is pretty common among evaluators of rods. This info really isn't anything revolutionary or new:

A reasonable thing to do, except that the weight assigned to each category is going to differ from angler to angler, and some categories that I rate highly (how well does it mend a line, how well does it roll cast, how well does it protect a tippet, etc) aren't even mentioned.

Price: 10 points. Cheapest gets a ten, then so-forth. In this economy, I've considered giving this category 20 points, but I have yet to do so because I work off the belief that performance matters more than price, gaurantee, fun factor and craftsmanship.

It's defining "peformance" that this question is really about. And it's subjective.

Category X: 10 points. A combination of things like warranty, turn around time in season, level of fix, refurbishments, service without being asked (like cleaning cork or noticing other things that are wrong), section replacement or in some cases entire rod replacement.

This one would zero with me (unless you included "does it have two tips?")

Craftsmanship: 10 points. Quality of cork, finish, wraps, details, case (or lack there of), components..etc.

No argument there.

Ferris Beuller's Day off Factor: 10 points. How fun is the rod to fish.

This would be the most heavily weight factor for me. I fish for fun. If the rod isn't any fun to fish, it won't get fished, and is therefore totally useless.

Overall weight

Certainly a factor, but as I get older, less so than it used to think it was.

Swing Weight: 10 Points. I've talked about this in past posts and likened it to a golf club at the clubhouse, rods with low swing weights are very fun to fish because then seem to move back and forth during the cast with ease. You can detect swing weight right at the rod rack. Pick up a rod and try it. If it seems effortless to false cast with it, it has a very low swing weight. If it feels in the hand as if it takes effort, it has a high swing weight.

Totally agree, but I suspect this is subjective, and will vary from individual to individual, depending on casting stroke. A rod is heavy if I get a sore shoulder from casting it for a day.

Swing Weight vs. Power: 20 Points. This is the most important performance category yet so it's double weighted. You want to know which rod is best right? WELL. Which rods feel lightest yet deliver the most power. The winners in this category are the ones that make you wish you were fishing them. This category is for all the fly fishing club guys who say, "you have to test cast the rod to really know, man!" They are right (sort of). A rod with wonderful swing weight can flunk when you cast it. Causes are it's not lined right or that it doesn't translate to actual casting.
That depends on what you mean by "power". If you mean "the ability to cast to the distance the rod will likely be used at, and maybe a little more" then yes, it is important. OTOH, if you just mean "how far does it cast" then it's only important if casting a long distance is important. If you mean "how well does it cast into the wind?" then that factor is more or less important depending on whether you plan to fish it in windy conditions. This factor deserves your 20 point weight it you're looking at a salt water rod, but is fairly unimportant if you're looking a a six foot three weight.

Performance at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 feet. 20 points. Nuff Said. Most of the fishing you do is in this range. FOOLS who test cast rods before they buy them just go right to distance. I've seen it a million times.

I couldn't agree more. Also, at those distance, will it turn over a 15' leader (if you're looking for a rod for spring creeks). If you're looking for a dry fly rod, will it turn over a bushy dry? If you're lobbing weighted nymphs, will it cast with an open enough loop to keep them away from your head?
Performance at 25, 35 and 45 feet. 20 points.
An all purpose rod SHINES in this category and deservedly so.


I thought we were talking about good rods, not all purpose rods. At 45 feet, you're starting to get to the point where dry fly fishing is less practical, because you can't handle the line on the water well enough, and setting the hook is starting to become hard. Most nymph fishing is done (here & especially in Europe) at far shorter distances. The only rods that I ever expect to fish at that distance are ones that I reserve for fishing large rivers. (Any rod will handle 35 feet.)

Performance at 50, 60, 70 and beyond feet: 20 Points.
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It's pointless to even talk about this factor for most trout fishing; I'd give it 0 weight. OTOH, if I'm looking for a rod for bass fishing in the Potomac, I'd give it the full 20. It totally depends on the expected use.


As I said earlier, some factors that I would consider important are totally missing here. Does it slap line down on the water so hard that all fish within 15 feet scatter? Does it have enough power to turn the size fish I expect to catch on it? If I'm fishing a wet or streamer downstream, does it have enough "give" that 1) the fly gets in the fish's mouth and 2) doesn't break the tippet at the same time?
How does my shoulder feel after a day's fishing? This isn't nearly as directly correlated to rod weight as you might think at first. I have some very fast 6 weights that a few hours of throwing popper 60 feet to smallmouth will leave my shoulder sore for days; I also have an old bamboo 6 weight that is heavy just to carry to river, but it casts those same poppers the same distance, into the wind, without it putting a strain on my shoulder at all. Guess which one I think is the better rod?
 
This whole conversation has promted me do a little research, and now throw some more gas on the fire. Why would I pay $700 for a foreign made Hardy SINTRIX instead of $700 (assuming I had $700 to blow on a rod) on domestic made Loomis, considering both use the same 3M technology? The Hardy is going to have to cast quantifiably several orders of magnitude better than the NRS to justify this.

Awesome point. Once we rate both we'll have to see where the chips fall in comparison to other models as well. To your point, the Hardy rod would be a Hardy. Sexy as hell but made over seas. True, they have a HIGH Ferris Beuller's Day off factor, awesome Craftsmanship and attention to detail and marvelous smooth tapers. I would imagine that the taper will determine a lot and Hardy rods have always been fabulous casting rods. I have high exectations for Hardy.

With this high praise bestowed on Hardy, since when doesn't a Loomis rod cast awesome? I mean, Loomis has some of the best tapers known to man kind. The Salty Fly Rodders out on Long Island don't love Loomis for nothing. Their rods have traditionally been the among the best performing rods there are. In fact, they are actually standards by which the best of the best are often pitted against.

Plus, as you mention Loomis is U.S. made, constructed of awesome components and they sport the single best gaurantee in the industry. Most likely, BOTH sport the potential to be wonderful rods. Of course, one or both may turn out to be too fast and if this is the case, they'll flop out in a comprehensive test format against competitors who actually design these things to fish with. I would have a hard time believing that Sage will fall for the too fast blunder when they apply 3M. But anything is possible, so stay tuned. The best will rise to the top, I'm sure of that much.

A mature, grounded and objective opinion can be formed once INDEPENDENT TESTERS determine how they rate. Also possible, with differences being marginal, often times cosmetic appeal will decide a buying decision. Or, perhaps where the rod is made will factor in. I know it would for me but only if I could tolerate the asthetics.

I always like to wait and put the rods through their paces before I make a boast (as one of our posters did already, with the new Hardy rods) that a new rod that isn't even out is going to blow away existing rods. Bah! That's just an example of someone falling from hype that they learned from someone who is either a big fan of a certain product or that has a vested interest in promoting said product. The bottom line is, these rods are going to need to be tested before we can yap about which is best. An employee of mine was convinced that the New Loomis rods were going to be the best. They took 18 years to build them, they must be, he said. Loomis ran ads for a full year on them. HYPE. MALARKEY! The rod was recalled before it even hit the shelves because the uplocking mechanism wouldn't accept a variety of different reel seat measurements. One would think that 18 years of design would factor this in, wouldn't one?

Don't forget, modern rod companies are making advances all the time. If one company (Usually Sage or Loomis) comes out with something truly revolutionary, the whole rest of the industry reacts as best they can. As these rods get lighter and lighter, we're going to see longer and longer single handed and switch rods also. But in 5 years the 3M technology will be most likely outdated completely. Believe me, molecular level reasearch and development teams from all the companies with a strong relationship with 3M will be all over this latest enhancement in modulous enhancement.

Both Loomis and Hardy are however very interesting, truly wonderful companies. Each company puts out a quality rod at every price point too, they truly do. I'm not a huge fan of the Loomis cosmetics in most cases, except on the Naitive Run and Cross Current models which are decently appealing. That California Buckeye Burl on the reel seats looks like it was LSD inspired as compared to a more traditional looking reel seat, which I prefer. However, my Stream Dance Metolius 8' 3 weight and 9' 4 weights are literally incredible fishing rods. Stunningly awesome in terms of performance. The differnece between the Z-Axis (which are slightly better rods) is very minimal and only obvious at longer distances with regard to accuracy due to superior tracking characteristics.

Another Hardy point: I HATE the direction Hardy is going with their reel seats too. They are getting more and more Orvis like. YUK, don't care for the way the reel seats look. To me the Sages, Winstons, T&T's Tom Morgan's are really works of art in comparison to the ultra modern looking big, bold and branded type designs with lots of metalic appeal (in the trout models). I prefer nickel silver in a premium rod, with gorgeous, rich wood for a reel seat. On the longer rods with the fighting butts, I just want a clean looking design that doesn't require me to match certain reels to it. Universal appeal is usually my preference.
 
Certainly, it's debatable. Anything's debatable when you use the word "better". All engineering is a matter of tradeoffs, and weight is one of them. If lighter means more fragile, then lighter isn't better if durability is more important to you. It's one factor.


Agreed.



I don't buy into that, other than that a rod should be tested with an appropriate line and reel and that line and reel isn't going to be the same for all rods. A classic cane rod with an agate stripping guide may not cast a hard plastic line well at all, but do be great with a thinner, more supple line like Cortland Sylk.



A reasonable thing to do, except that the weight assigned to each category is going to differ from angler to angler, and some categories that I rate highly (how well does it mend a line, how well does it roll cast, how well does it protect a tippet, etc) aren't even mentioned.



It's defining "peformance" that this question is really about. And it's subjective.



This one would zero with me (unless you included "does it have two tips?")



No argument there.



This would be the most heavily weight factor for me. I fish for fun. If the rod isn't any fun to fish, it won't get fished, and is therefore totally useless.



Certainly a factor, but as I get older, less so than it used to think it was.



Totally agree, but I suspect this is subjective, and will vary from individual to individual, depending on casting stroke. A rod is heavy if I get a sore shoulder from casting it for a day.


That depends on what you mean by "power". If you mean "the ability to cast to the distance the rod will likely be used at, and maybe a little more" then yes, it is important. OTOH, if you just mean "how far does it cast" then it's only important if casting a long distance is important. If you mean "how well does it cast into the wind?" then that factor is more or less important depending on whether you plan to fish it in windy conditions. This factor deserves your 20 point weight it you're looking at a salt water rod, but is fairly unimportant if you're looking a a six foot three weight.


I couldn't agree more. Also, at those distance, will it turn over a 15' leader (if you're looking for a rod for spring creeks). If you're looking for a dry fly rod, will it turn over a bushy dry? If you're lobbing weighted nymphs, will it cast with an open enough loop to keep them away from your head?


I thought we were talking about good rods, not all purpose rods. At 45 feet, you're starting to get to the point where dry fly fishing is less practical, because you can't handle the line on the water well enough, and setting the hook is starting to become hard. Most nymph fishing is done (here & especially in Europe) at far shorter distances. The only rods that I ever expect to fish at that distance are ones that I reserve for fishing large rivers. (Any rod will handle 35 feet.)



As I said earlier, some factors that I would consider important are totally missing here. Does it slap line down on the water so hard that all fish within 15 feet scatter? Does it have enough power to turn the size fish I expect to catch on it? If I'm fishing a wet or streamer downstream, does it have enough "give" that 1) the fly gets in the fish's mouth and 2) doesn't break the tippet at the same time?
How does my shoulder feel after a day's fishing? This isn't nearly as directly correlated to rod weight as you might think at first. I have some very fast 6 weights that a few hours of throwing popper 60 feet to smallmouth will leave my shoulder sore for days; I also have an old bamboo 6 weight that is heavy just to carry to river, but it casts those same poppers the same distance, into the wind, without it putting a strain on my shoulder at all. Guess which one I think is the better rod?

Re: How Do You Rate a Rod??

Originally Posted by CatskillKid http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulletin/f18-rods-reels-lines-leaders-tippets/t20047-how-do-you-rate-rod.html - post173656
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http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulletin/f18-rods-reels-lines-leaders-tippets/t20047-how-do-you-rate-rod.html - post173656

Also, Understand that Lighter is Better. Period. All things being equal, this isn't debatable.Certainly, it's debatable. Anything's debatable when you use the word "better". All engineering is a matter of tradeoffs, and weight is one of them. If lighter means more fragile, then lighter isn't better if durability is more important to you. It's one factor….​
It appears that you either didn't read closely enough here or you are intentionally nit picking and literally grasping at straws right off the bat. ALL THINGS BEING EQUAL in no way, shape or form supports your commentary. How would two equal rods, one lighter than the other, be more fragile?
Most importantly, great rods aren't always expensive. Agreed.
I believe all comperable rods of a given rod length and taper shoud be compared against each other. To do this, we use the same reel and line when testing. Based on yearly sales numbers, the Ross CLA and either the Sci. Ang. GPX or Rio Gold Fly Lines are used in all of my tests of the medium to faster type freshwater rods. The slower rods get trout appropriate tapers, such as Rio's Trout LT or Sci Anglers Mastery Trout Taper. Each line is therefore appropriate for the rods being tested. We do use THE SAME line for all tests and our staff agrees on the line before the tests begin. Please note, we feel there are other excellent line companies, Cortland and Airflow among them. Also, please understand that 3M makes both Rio and Sci Angler's (and Orvis) lines so there isn't a revolutionary difference among the lines we select. Based on the tapers, we select lines to optimize performace and simulate what the average buyer will choose. Based on sales numbers, we pick what we feel is most likely the best to most people.​
I don't buy into that, other than that a rod should be tested with an appropriate line and reel and that line and reel isn't going to be the same for all rods. A classic cane rod with an agate stripping guide may not cast a hard plastic line well at all, but do be great with a thinner, more supple line like Cortland Sylk.
If we did this we would not have an equal comparison to base our findings. PLUS, we test a group of similar rods to begin with and a common ground is needed to evaluate a group. Also, why would we test a classic cane rod? As far as I know, Leonard and Payne are no longer made and therefore not available or even applicable to my post. We test modern rods that are actually for sale across the country in most fly shops. Obviously, if it was 1954 and we were testing all 7'6" 5 weights, we would probably have the common sense to match these bamboo beauties with the appropriate line. Also, a STANDARD reel is ABSOLUTELY part of the equation. Again, placing a different reel on every rod to give the rod the best swing weight would completely go against the standard of common ground. It appears you missed the point of this entire post. Of course all tests have a degree of subjectivity. We believe we have dramatically minimized this and we've even recognized that a small part of the test NEEDS to be subjective. Some anglers place a huge value on subjective things and that's ok.
We assign the following point system to each rod tested. This is the nuts and bolts of how I ascertain which rod is best. Also, keep in mind that this information is pretty common among evaluators of rods. This info really isn't anything revolutionary or new:​
A reasonable thing to do, except that the weight assigned to each category is going to differ from angler to angler, and some categories that I rate highly (how well does it mend a line, how well does it roll cast, how well does it protect a tippet, etc) aren't even mentioned.
Actually, by using our rating criteria you can do just that. In fact, this is WHY we rate them. If a customer is going for a great performing rod that is clearly the absolute best for asthetics and overall craftsmanship, then he can already justify spending an extra amount, even a significant one. By the same token, if a customer wants a rod that he perceives as fun to fish, then he is going to place a high weight on the Ferris Beuller's Day off category. Our test allows a buyer to customize his or her priorities. It also lets a buyer know which rods are truly the best and why. This doesn't mean they are going to buy the rod that is at the top in our test. We fully understand that and happily take their money just the same. A good fisherman can clean a river out with a Fisher Price rod if he wants to. I have watched stocked fish get hooked in a river during fishing classes with just tippet and the teachers hand and arm. The limb protected the tippet just fine.
<B>
Price:</B>​
10 points. Cheapest gets a ten, then so-forth.​
In this economy, I've considered giving this category 20 points, but I have yet to do so because I work off the belief that performance matters more than price, gaurantee, fun factor and craftsmanship. It's defining "peformance" that this question is really about. And it's subjective.
Performance is certainly in no way subjective when the test is standardized. That's why factors like the same lines, a group of testers, the same reels and doing the same things with each rod give us such an excellent picture as to what that rod can and can't do well.​
<B>
Category X</B>​
: 10 points. A combination of things like warranty, turn around time in season, level of fix, refurbishments, service without being asked (like cleaning cork or noticing other things that are wrong), section replacement or in some cases entire rod replacement.​
This one would zero with me (unless you included "does it have two tips?")
You've made kind of a silly statement here. If a customer is fishing and breaks their rod when stringing it up in mid June (peak season nationally) and one company charges $35 to fix it and takes a month while the other charges nothing and takes two weeks, you will respect why it is our job to place the best rod we can in their hands to begin with.​
Since we sell all brands, we have witnessed every imaginable problem with the nuts and bolts of how gaurantees actually work. In fact, we find that most customers kind of expect the Dealer to just replace the rod for them. Countless temper tantrums on the parts of these individuals (which are always sad but VERY creative) could be avoided if they considered this category when buying the rod.​
Further more, the attention to detail and overall service each company gives when repairing a rod speaks volumes as to their commitment to customer service. You must enjoy waiting at the back of lines, no?
<B>
Craftsmanship</B>​
: 10 points. Quality of cork, finish, wraps, details, case (or lack there of), components..etc.​
No argument there.
Wow, you cut us a break. Are you sure you can't find something to criticize? Craftsmanship is actually important when selecting a rod?
<B>
Ferris Beuller's Day off Factor</B>​
: 10 points. How fun is the rod to fish.​
This would be the most heavily weight factor for me. I fish for fun. If the rod isn't any fun to fish, it won't get fished, and is therefore totally useless.
Perfect. Again, there is no law against giving as much weight to any category as you want to. The IFGA Police won't arrest you. This is also the one category we can't measure. We go with the opinions of the test casters only. How fun was the rod to fish? Was it work? Did it load easily? Did you feel in touch with the line at all times? Were you stunned by the rod, or just mildly impressed? Most importantly, did this particular rod stand out from the group we tested? How so?
<B>
Overall weight</B>​
Certainly a factor, but as I get older, less so than it used to think it was.
This is a completely over-rated category and one many rod manufacturers lie about or distort as well. However, we stick with it for obvious reasons. As modern rods develop and technology increases, lighter is better (ALL THINGS BEING EQUAL).
<B>
Swing Weight</B>​
: 10 Points. I've talked about this in past posts and likened it to a golf club at the clubhouse, rods with low swing weights are very fun to fish because then seem to move back and forth during the cast with ease. You can detect swing weight right at the rod rack. Pick up a rod and try it. If it seems effortless to false cast with it, it has a very low swing weight. If it feels in the hand as if it takes effort, it has a high swing weight.​
Totally agree, but I suspect this is subjective, and will vary from individual to individual, depending on casting stroke. A rod is heavy if I get a sore shoulder from casting it for a day.
Subjective? Us? Never. This isn't a category where we need anyone to agree. It's just a factual category that is no different than measuring the weight of a rod with our Postal Scale.
Swing Weight is the weight of the rod, out ahead of your hand, when the rod is held in a horizontal position. Wit can be calculated by placing a small piece of packing foam in the center of the digital scale and using it as a fulcrum. If the rod is placed horizontally on the scale, positioning it so that when the fulcrum is centered, the uppermost part of the rod handle will be three inches to the right of the fulcrum of foam. The rest of the handle and reel seat extends back to the right, while most of the rod extended horizontally back to the left. Then to measure the swing weight in ounces, simply press down on the center of the rod grip (where your hand should be) and read the downward pressure on the scale with the rod in a horizontal position. Golf Shops use a similar method but they have a machine to do this. Normally we wouldn't need to share this information with a customer, other than to give a lightning quick and concise point so they could understand why it's important.
<B>
Swing Weight vs. Power</B>​
: 20 Points. This is the most important performance category yet so it's double weighted. You want to know which rod is best right? WELL. Which rods feel lightest yet deliver the most power. The winners in this category are the ones that make you wish you were fishing them. This category is for all the fly fishing club guys who say, "you have to test cast the rod to really know, man!" They are right (sort of). A rod with wonderful swing weight can flunk when you cast it. Causes are it's not lined right or that it doesn't translate to actual casting.​

That depends on what you mean by "power". If you mean "the ability to cast to the distance the rod will likely be used at, and maybe a little more" then yes, it is important. OTOH, if you just mean "how far does it cast" then it's only important if casting a long distance is important. If you mean "how well does it cast into the wind?" then that factor is more or less important depending on whether you plan to fish it in windy conditions. This factor deserves your 20 point weight it you're looking at a salt water rod, but is fairly unimportant if you're looking a a six foot three weight.
We whole heartedly disagree with you here. First of all, we're not testing a 6 foot three weight against a 10 weight when we do our tests. We leave tests like that for fools.
Second of all, in a group of similar rods, this is a very important category. The winners in this category are rods that feel the lightest in the hands of our testers, yet deliver the most usable power. With 10 similar rods, this category comes to life in an actual test. A heavy saltwater group of rods can all easily develop high line speeds. But, the duds in this category will feel like clubs in the hands of the casters. THAT'S BECAUSE Swing Weight vs. Power alone don’t make a great casting rod. The way the rod flexes to deliver this power tells the rest of the story and that is what we look for in this or any other group of rods (say…a group of 6 foot three weights for example!)
Performance at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 feet. 20 points. Nuff Said. Most of the fishing you do is in this range. FOOLS who test cast rods before they buy them just go right to distance. I've seen it a million times. I couldn't agree more. Also, at those distance, will it turn over a 15' leader (if you're looking for a rod for spring creeks). If you're looking for a dry fly rod, will it turn over a bushy dry? If you're lobbing weighted nymphs, will it cast with an open enough loop to keep them away from your head?
This is the category where many highly advanced rods disappoint me. It seems as if many really weren't made to actually fish. It's also the category that is most confusing to customers because almost all advertising in the industry leads them away from looking hard at this category. However, a rod that is strong here is also likely to flop in the next two categories and that is precisely why some rods actually are better than others. Most customers aren't going to start their fishing careers by purchasing multiple rods. They often need versatility and so do we all if we wish to be able to adapt to changing conditions on the stream and get the most out of the rods we chose to purchase.​
<B>
Performance at 25, 35 and 45 feet.</B>​
20 points.
An all purpose rod SHINES in this category and deservedly so.​

I thought we were talking about good rods, not all purpose rods. At 45 feet, you're starting to get to the point where dry fly fishing is less practical, because you can't handle the line on the water well enough, and setting the hook is starting to become hard. Most nymph fishing is done (here & especially in Europe) at far shorter distances. The only rods that I ever expect to fish at that distance are ones that I reserve for fishing large rivers. (Any rod will handle 35 feet.)
We're actually talking about a group of rods tested. If we pick 10 9' 4 weights, why then we're going to test them! A good rod will not win a test. The competition is too strong. There are a lot of good rods on the market. We want to know which ones are great.​
Drilling a fly into the wind is important and you need accuracy for the times you do it at distances. Those who fish bigger water (like the Upper Delaware Tributary for example) fish well beyond 40 feet with dry flies every single day during the late spring and summer. When a large trout rises, you need to be able to respond. Some rods that fish great in close, require the caster to double haul to force it to reach out easily while other's don't. So, we feel what sets a great rod apart from a good rod is the ability to do as much as possible with it. The term All Purpose in no way detracts from this thought.​
However, feel free to give this category little to no weight if you are buying a rod for a more narrow purpose. But understand, you suffer the consiquences if you ask it to do more.​
Performance at 50, 60, 70 and beyond feet: 20 Points.
[\QUOTE]

It's pointless to even talk about this factor for most trout fishing; I'd give it 0 weight. OTOH, if I'm looking for a rod for bass fishing in the Potomac, I'd give it the full 20. It totally depends on the expected use. As I said earlier, some factors that I would consider important are totally missing here. Does it slap line down on the water so hard that all fish within 15 feet scatter? Does it have enough power to turn the size fish I expect to catch on it? If I'm fishing a wet or streamer downstream, does it have enough "give" that 1) the fly gets in the fish's mouth and 2) doesn't break the tippet at the same time?
How does my shoulder feel after a day's fishing? This isn't nearly as directly correlated to rod weight as you might think at first. I have some very fast 6 weights that a few hours of throwing popper 60 feet to smallmouth will leave my shoulder sore for days; I also have an old bamboo 6 weight that is heavy just to carry to river, but it casts those same poppers the same distance, into the wind, without it putting a strain on my shoulder at all. Guess which one I think is the better rod?
Your perogative entirely if you feel this is a pointless category in Trout Fishing. However, we can in no way shape or form agree with you. Streamers are a part of fishing and they are often fished with Teeny lines in rivers. Shooting a cast or two is part of any streamer guy's day.​
A rod that slaps the line down hard on the water when fishing dry flies is being operated incorrectly and or the caster is using way too heavy of a line with entirely the wrong taper. The rod is the last of the problems in your analogy. If the loop is allowed to unfold in the air and the appropriate leader is being used, this will be much less of an issue.​
Fish turning power is tensile breaking strength and blank flex. The bigger the quarry, the more need to consider things like this. Wet's and Streamers Fished downstream have slack in the line. When tippets break, it's because too much slack came tight too quickly. Better line management minimizes this with rods that are even stiff. Also, choosing the correct tippet diameter and corresponding test weight will further eliminate this. Since when do you need a light tippet for this kind of fishing anyway? Also, what bearing to any of these points have with regard to how far a rod casts? WE AREN'T TESTING OLD BAMBOO RODS AGAINST ORVIS HELIOS BLANKS. We're testing groups of similar rods of the exact same line weight and length.
 
The problem with this thread is too many words. The Catskillkid is writting War and Peace in each post. You however, clearly do not suffer from this affliction.
 
I used just three of the factors when when choosing my bamboo rods....

Price...

Craftsmanship .....

Fun to fish.....

And I must say, I haven't gone wrong once.... Just love fishing them over any graphite rod I ever used...

---------- Post added at 02:39 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:31 PM ----------

The problem with this thread is too many words. The Catskillkid is writting War and Peace in each post. You however, clearly do not suffer from this affliction.


I'm just glad to see somebody has passion in what they are saying and will take the time explaining their reasons for others to see.. I find CatsKill's post very helpful and enjoyable to read... Post on CatskillKid
 
Re: How Do You Rate a Rod??

Wet's and Streamers Fished downstream have slack in the line. When tippets break, it's because too much slack came tight too quickly. Better line management minimizes this with rods that are even stiff. Also, choosing the correct tippet diameter and corresponding test weight will further eliminate this. Since when do you need a light tippet for this kind of fishing anyway?
When I'm fishing size 18 or 20 soft hackles. Which I do, regularly.

Also, what bearing to any of these points have with regard to how far a rod casts? WE AREN'T TESTING OLD BAMBOO RODS AGAINST ORVIS HELIOS BLANKS. We're testing groups of similar rods of the exact same line weight and length.
[/SIZE]

That's exactly the point. I don't care how far a rod casts -- I care about how a rod fishes, and the difference between a good and great rod fall in that category. (With of course the caveat that it casts to the distance that I intend to fish it at.) I don't buy rods as casting tools; I buy them as fishing tools.
 
When I'm fishing size 18 or 20 soft hackles. Which I do, regularly.

Hmmm. Your need actually makes sense. What size tippet do you select for this application and what rod(s) do you favor for this? Are you a Sly Nemmes fan? Just curious. I am.



That's exactly the point. I don't care how far a rod casts -- I care about how a rod fishes, and the difference between a good and great rod fall in that category. (With of course the caveat that it casts to the distance that I intend to fish it at.) I don't buy rods as casting tools; I buy them as fishing tools.

Interesting point. I don't mean to bugger you but isn't it necessary to cast various distances in order to fish effectively and adapt to both hatches and large fish when they show themselves? I would think double hauling or working excessively on the occasions you do have to reach out a little further would be something you'd prefer to avoid if possible. Certainly the overwhelming number of customers who are buying their first rod or a new rod to replace an older rod would. Hence, the many points of my tests.

One of my most knowledgeable staff members was reading over this post today and he wanted me to pass along to you a second that we encourage each customer to rate the categories in our tests with as much weight as they see fit for the types of fishing they're doing, as the application, the customer's needs and their budgets (which I scolded him for mentioning) were all factors in how we serviced them. He feels, as do I, that our tests give us a wonderful platform on which to say, "Sir, this is the best rod for what you're doing. Here's why..." Then we go down the line and stop when he pulls out the wallet, not before mentioning countless add on sales of course. But then, that's why so many divorces are caused at the hands skilled salesmen.

---------- Post added at 11:35 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:18 PM ----------

I used just three of the factors when when choosing my bamboo rods....

Price...

Craftsmanship .....

Fun to fish.....

And I must say, I haven't gone wrong once.... Just love fishing them over any graphite rod I ever used...

---------- Post added at 02:39 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:31 PM ----------




I'm just glad to see somebody has passion in what they are saying and will take the time explaining their reasons for others to see.. I find CatsKill's post very helpful and enjoyable to read... Post on CatskillKid

Sneaky Pete, you are too nice. Trout Nazi, your point is very valid. I was asked to explain how I rate a rod, keep that in mind. While I am here in the spirit of being just another guy, the reality is I run the biggest Outdoor business in the country and I have been employed in the Fishing Industry my entire life. Our complicated tests help us ascertain which rods are the best and it helps us sell them. Please forgive us for wanting to know how the rods in our showrooms stack up against each other and also, please forgive us for wanting to speak intelligently to millions of customers each year as we try to answer the millions of questions they ask us.

It would be nice if we could just say, "This one good Sir." "You will like." And from now on, I'll try to keep my posts to a few sentences, with no reasons, no justifications, no facts. Just sheer, unadultrated, fancy-free, fly by the cuff opinions. That way, you'll enjoy my posts more and I'll be able to sleep at night knowing that a dope like you is happier. (I'm only teasing so don't take this as a real insult ok, you actually do have a valid point, this post is pretty in depth)

Maybe I'll just shoot for short stories. How's that for a comprimise? Also, lets admit that all of the posters here have a lot of passion for the sport. Fellas, this is fly-fishing, not a pick up two hand shove football game. I don't quite understand how a room full of men who think they know a lot about a subject could resort to being snotty when confronted with the grimm reality of cold hard facts. I wonder if they find such information to be emotionally disturbing because of the level they are invested in the products they favor or most likely endorse.

I sell Winston rods but if I thought they were missing the Eight Ball I would just stop carrying them instead of having a melt down every time someone bashed them (along with giving some facts as to why).
 
Slightly "Off Topic"
.......And from now on, I'll try to keep my posts to a few sentences, with no reasons, no justifications, no facts. .......
You appear to have some information and experience you wish to impart.

When you have a lengthy treatise in mind, why not post it as an "Article", rather than a forum post (see the "Home" page).

For one thing it won't get lost in the archives, when people stop replying...

We also have a "blog" function if you prefer that format.
 
Slightly "Off Topic"
You appear to have some information and experience you wish to impart.

When you have a lengthy treatise in mind, why not post it as an "Article", rather than a forum post (see the "Home" page).

For one thing it won't get lost in the archives, when people stop replying...

We also have a "blog" function if you prefer that format.

Or you can all go to George Anderson's yellowstoneangler.com and read all of this same stuff first hand, where most of this stuff was cut and pasted from. See the 5wt and 8wt shootouts.
 
Or you can all go to George Anderson's yellowstoneangler.com and read all of this same stuff first hand, where most of this stuff was cut and pasted from. See the 5wt and 8wt shootouts.

I was just gonna say that...

This wing nut catskilll kid is using yellowstone anglers rubric :finger:... take a look at it...
 
Thank you for educating me. If it wasn't for you, I don't know how a dope like me would choose a rod, since we're all idiots here and have no clue as to why we like the rods that we own. Also, thank you for starting this thread in the first place. Thank you for answering a question that no one asked. You posed the question as a convenient platform with which to answer your own question and go on and on with your long-winded replies. Business a little slow lately? Got alot of time to write, no? By the way, Geroge Anderson wants royalties on his work (unless your Geroge, is that you Geroge?). Plaaaaaaaagerism. In addition to knowing how to cast, I can do a web search too. Here's a compromise, why don't you just post a hyper-link to his site so we can read all of this first hand in a nice succinct, well written article, instead of listening so some know-it-all asshole (I kid, I kid!), tying to be an internet rock-star, pretend like he just invented the wheel?
 
Thank you for educating me. If it wasn't for you, I don't know how a dope like me would choose a rod, since we're all idiots here and have no clue as to why we like the rods that we own. Also, thank you for starting this thread in the first place. Thank you for answering a question that no one asked. You posed the question as a convenient platform with which to answer your own question and go on and on with your long-winded replies. Business a little slow lately? Got alot of time to write, no? By the way, Geroge Anderson wants royalties on his work (unless your Geroge, is that you Geroge?). Plaaaaaaaagerism. In addition to knowing how to cast, I can do a web search too. Here's a compromise, why don't you just post a hyper-link to his site so we can read all of this first hand in a nice succinct, well written article, instead of listening so some know-it-all asshole (I kid, I kid!), tying to be an internet rock-star, pretend like he just invented the wheel?

SMOKED like a christmas ham.
 
Interesting point. I don't mean to bugger you but isn't it necessary to cast various distances in order to fish effectively and adapt to both hatches and large fish when they show themselves? I would think double hauling or working excessively on the occasions you do have to reach out a little further would be something you'd prefer to avoid if possible.
You're not at all buggering me; this is a friendly discussion as far as I'm concerned.

"Various distances" means different things, depending on where you're fishing and what techniques you use. 95+% of the trout fishing that I do is on streams less than 40 feet across, often much less. Whether or not a rod that I bought to fish on those casts 70 feet or not is immaterial. Do I own a couple rods that will cast into the next county if I want to fish larger rivers? Of course I do, but they are very seldom used, because they're niche rods optimized for distance. They obviously have their place, but for most of the fishing that I actually do, they're not particularly well suited.
Certainly the overwhelming number of customers who are buying their first rod or a new rod to replace an older rod would. Hence, the many points of my tests.

As I've said another board, a rod that would qualify as the rod I would own "if I could only own one" would be a rod I would never fish if I could own three or four. Jack of all trades is master of none.

The criteria, and the points that you gave to them, would be spot on if I were a guide rowing a drift boat on a large river. But if that's not the kind of fishing you do day-to-day, then other criteria should be considered

One of my most knowledgeable staff members was reading over this post today and he wanted me to pass along to you a second that we encourage each customer to rate the categories in our tests with as much weight as they see fit for the types of fishing they're doing, as the application, the customer's needs and their budgets (which I scolded him for mentioning) were all factors in how we serviced them.

Which is exactly what you should be doing. I would just add a couple of other categories as well, depending on the intended use.


As for the tiny soft hackles, I usually fish the tiny ones (like the #20 Spanish Needle in my avatar) on either 6x (on freestones) or 7x (on spring creeks). I'm somewhat of a fan of Nemes, and I think he's done a great service to the sport by bringing soft hackles back from obscurity, but I think his greatest contribution is to point people in the direction of the older authors, like Pritt, and Edmonds&Lee.
 
SMOKED like a christmas ham.

The Anderson test is nothing new. The entire rod building industry PERPETUATED and INVENTED it over ten years befor his post was made. I clearly stated that the test we use is NOTHING NEW. Try reading.

You're a nasty spirited, vulgar punk, nothing more. Why else would you cast the first stone when you were never insulted? Because you like to insult anyone who threatens your pea sized brain? Or, perhaps it is acually you who has nothing better to do. I'm glad your true colors have shined during this post. You're def. a class A trout nazi or trouser trout or whatever it is you identify with.

---------- Post added at 11:34 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:31 PM ----------

You're not at all buggering me; this is a friendly discussion as far as I'm concerned.

"Various distances" means different things, depending on where you're fishing and what techniques you use. 95+% of the trout fishing that I do is on streams less than 40 feet across, often much less. Whether or not a rod that I bought to fish on those casts 70 feet or not is immaterial. Do I own a couple rods that will cast into the next county if I want to fish larger rivers? Of course I do, but they are very seldom used, because they're niche rods optimized for distance. They obviously have their place, but for most of the fishing that I actually do, they're not particularly well suited.


As I've said another board, a rod that would qualify as the rod I would own "if I could only own one" would be a rod I would never fish if I could own three or four. Jack of all trades is master of none.

The criteria, and the points that you gave to them, would be spot on if I were a guide rowing a drift boat on a large river. But if that's not the kind of fishing you do day-to-day, then other criteria should be considered



Which is exactly what you should be doing. I would just add a couple of other categories as well, depending on the intended use.


As for the tiny soft hackles, I usually fish the tiny ones (like the #20 Spanish Needle in my avatar) on either 6x (on freestones) or 7x (on spring creeks). I'm somewhat of a fan of Nemes, and I think he's done a great service to the sport by bringing soft hackles back from obscurity, but I think his greatest contribution is to point people in the direction of the older authors, like Pritt, and Edmonds&Lee.

Excellent points. Understanding where you fish and the kinds of rods you use is the sign of someone who actually picks a rod with true purpose. Looks like you really get delicate with the soft hackles as well.
 
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