Hey Tom, Thanks for the thoughtful advice. I do flip and pitch into a lot of heavy cover around bank edges for bass in the lake I fish. I have heard that a fast reel like the revo rocket is good for getting bass out of heavy cover quickly so I was thinking about pairing those two. This combo was also suggested by answers to this post so I may give the 7'5 MH XF Bass Mojo a try with the rocket for flipping into cover (your first suggestion I believe). In retrospect, I wish I wouldn't have gotten a MH XF, but it sounds like that could still work for me and I could still use that rod for some heavier bottom contact soft baits.
I hadn't thought of it until now but I do sometimes troll for saugeye using flicker shads which I believe qualifies as a deep crankbait. I had only been thinking of that heavy rod as a heavy flipping rod for punching with a heavy weight texas rig plastic, but maybe it should become a flicker shad type trolling rod. Does that align with your thoughts?
It sounds like my next purchase should be something MH mod fast to fast for the shimano metanium. Maybe a less than 7' Dobyns fury MH F or a Bass Mojo MH M (it seems their action labeling is on the stiff side).
To answer your question about what I fish most, I tend to use my finnesse spinning setup (not really mentioned in this discussion) for ned rigs. I fish a lot of wacky rig senkos, spinner baits, chatterbaits, texas rigged soft plastics and I pitch/flip jigs the most. I live in Columbus Ohio where we have some great lakes but they are extremely pressured and it isn't easy to catch fish without season/species/spawn specific technical knowledge. I have only been seriously fishing for a couple years. The first year I hardly caught anything on a kayak, it was incredibly discouraging. The second year I bought a 10' plastic boat with a trolling motor and I had the most success on ned, wacky rigs and spinnerbaits. This year I just bought a 16' Tracker and have tried to pound the shore more with jigs and texas rigs, but I am still learning and clueless.
thanks for the advice, I'll keep experimenting
Ken