DP82 Posted December 20, 2017 Posted December 20, 2017 Ive been going through old posts. I have a similar issue. I own a DX 745 paired with Metantium mgl, it's a great rod. I mainly flip T rigs and 1/2 oz jigs with it. I actually hope to c -rig with it next year. Now here is my issue.. My fiance got me a NRX 893c for Xmas, it's on the way. First loomis rod over an IMX and im excited. Can I flip with the NRX 893c?? Mostly 3/8 T rigs and up to 1/2oz jigs. North east guy so nothing too nasty around here but I need that 893c to replace my DX745. Description says med- heavy. Sounds more like a senko/fluke rod to me, which I definitely don't need. But the description also says 3/16 - 5/8 which is perfect weight range. Can I get it done flippin with NRX 893c?? Should I exchange for the NRX 894c mentioned in above article's?? Also I read the 894c is same as DX746 range. I owe a 746 champ and it's my frog rod..lol I don't need anything nearly that heavy.. Anyone have experience with the 893c?? Quote
Super User fishballer06 Posted December 20, 2017 Super User Posted December 20, 2017 I own the 853C in the GLX series. I use mine for 3/15-5/16 jigs, and it will also handle a 3/8oz as well. I wouldn't really want to go over that for extended use. Since you are familiar with the Dobyns series, I'd say your 893C is going to be comparable to a 744. I hope this helps. Quote
Super User iabass8 Posted December 20, 2017 Super User Posted December 20, 2017 You're definitely going to want the 894. 893 is an awesome senko and light trig rod. Not a rod I'd be flippin 3/8oz trigs or 1/2 jigs on. Definitely wouldn't be carolina rigging on it either. A good compromise is the 873. It's in between, kinda, to the 894 and 893 though it's a lot closer to the 894. The dobyns 6 power rods aren't the same across the board. IE the 766 and 746 fish very very differently. Same goes for the 735 and 745 models. Some are flipping models and some aren't. The 894 is in between the 745 and 746 power wise. 894 is faster in action. Quote
LOZSteve Posted December 20, 2017 Posted December 20, 2017 Agree with iabass8 if using the NRX line you should go with the 894c. I have the 893, 873, and the 894: 893 is a great t-rig rod, but I would not go over 3/8 and plastic. The 873 is great for heavier Texas rigs and Carolina rigs. The 894 is great for 1/2 to 3/4 ounce jigs and can also Carolina rig as well. Quote
DP82 Posted December 20, 2017 Author Posted December 20, 2017 Your 894 doesn't handle anything below 1/2 oz well? Quote
Super User fishwizzard Posted December 20, 2017 Super User Posted December 20, 2017 I have two 3 power Loomis rods, a Classic IMX and a MagBass GLX. Both of them are rated to 3/4oz but seem to top out at or a little over 1/2oz. I use 1/4oz jigs with them as once you add a trailer the total weight is right around 1/2oz. A 1/2oz Siebert brush jig with a Rage Craw trailer weighs in at .962oz and feels way way overloaded on both my rods. Quote
Yudo1 Posted December 20, 2017 Posted December 20, 2017 I own an 893 and 873. I throw 3/8 and 1/2 jigs with my 873 while my 893 is used for light t-rigs. I've read the 894 is the best 1/2-3/4 jig rod made. It sounds like you need the 873, but I'll let others who actually own the 894 comment on how it fishes 3/8. Quote
Super User kickerfish1 Posted December 21, 2017 Super User Posted December 21, 2017 10 hours ago, fishwizzard said: I have two 3 power Loomis rods, a Classic IMX and a MagBass GLX. Both of them are rated to 3/4oz but seem to top out at or a little over 1/2oz. I use 1/4oz jigs with them as once you add a trailer the total weight is right around 1/2oz. A 1/2oz Siebert brush jig with a Rage Craw trailer weighs in at .962oz and feels way way overloaded on both my rods. Interesting. You are saying that a standard Rage craw weighs nearly a 1/2 oz by itself? I highly doubt that. I would bet the standard would be much closer to 1/4 - 5/16. Your scale might be off a bit. Quote
CroakHunter Posted December 21, 2017 Posted December 21, 2017 5 minutes ago, kickerfish1 said: Interesting. You are saying that a standard Rage craw weighs nearly a 1/2 oz by itself? I highly doubt that. I would bet the standard would be much closer to 1/4 - 5/16. Your scale might be off a bit. No he's not saying that. He's saying that the craw, hook, skirt, band or wire tie, and brush guard weigh around .5 ounces. The lead head weighs around .5 ounces. 2 Quote
Super User fishwizzard Posted December 21, 2017 Super User Posted December 21, 2017 10 minutes ago, CroakHunter said: No he's not saying that. He's saying that the craw, hook, skirt, band or wire tie, and brush guard weigh around .5 ounces. The lead head weighs around .5 ounces. Exactly. A Rage Craw weighs ~0.310oz, or around 5/16oz. The rest of the jig components make up the rest. I have found that generally, a jig with (proportional) trailer weighs about double the listed weight of just the jig. 1 Quote
Super User iabass8 Posted December 21, 2017 Super User Posted December 21, 2017 22 hours ago, DP82 said: Your 894 doesn't handle anything below 1/2 oz well? The 894 handles 3/8oz jigs-1oz jigs really great. 1/2oz-3/4 is the sweet spot. 1 Quote
UKCATSBASSER Posted December 25, 2017 Posted December 25, 2017 I have a 853 NRX and stop at 3/8 plus plastic. Then I move up to 873 after that. Quote
DP82 Posted October 17, 2018 Author Posted October 17, 2018 Update. Almost a year later. 1st of all thank all of you for your input. This was an incredible light, sensitive rod and versatile rod. From weightless to bottom contact. Imho best trig senko rod in the planet if you put sunline nylon amazing fluke rod. Wacky rig I would choose the 2 power rod over this but it would still get it done. Handled 1/4oz shaky heads +plastic beautifully. Finesse C-rig worked pretty good. Even performed with 1/2 oz tungsten and 10 inch worms! Got in a pinch last week and even chucked 1/2oz traps and yo-yo back to the boat. Only negative I can think of is I now want Nrx 822s dsr, 852c, 823s shr, 873c car etc...lol 1 Quote
Matt_3479 Posted October 18, 2018 Posted October 18, 2018 Well glad you have enjoyed this rod! It will probably my next one. That or an 843 mbr. I have the glx 852c and 894c and love these two rods!! The 852c is a wicked little rod but it is a little on the light side for driving those big hooks on a Texas rigged senko. But have no problems with the 894c throwing 3/8oz baits what so ever Quote
Super User WRB Posted October 18, 2018 Super User Posted October 18, 2018 On December 19, 2017 at 4:39 PM, DP82 said: Ive been going through old posts. I have a similar issue. I own a DX 745 paired with Metantium mgl, it's a great rod. I mainly flip T rigs and 1/2 oz jigs with it. I actually hope to c -rig with it next year. Now here is my issue.. My fiance got me a NRX 893c for Xmas, it's on the way. First loomis rod over an IMX and im excited. Can I flip with the NRX 893c?? Mostly 3/8 T rigs and up to 1/2oz jigs. North east guy so nothing too nasty around here but I need that 893c to replace my DX745. Description says med- heavy. Sounds more like a senko/fluke rod to me, which I definitely don't need. But the description also says 3/16 - 5/8 which is perfect weight range. Can I get it done flippin with NRX 893c?? Should I exchange for the NRX 894c mentioned in above article's?? Also I read the 894c is same as DX746 range. I owe a 746 champ and it's my frog rod..lol I don't need anything nearly that heavy.. Anyone have experience with the 893c?? Do you know the difference between flipping and pitching? Quote
DP82 Posted October 22, 2018 Author Posted October 22, 2018 On 10/17/2018 at 10:02 PM, Matt_3479 said: Well glad you have enjoyed this rod! It will probably my next one. That or an 843 mbr. I have the glx 852c and 894c and love these two rods!! The 852c is a wicked little rod but it is a little on the light side for driving those big hooks on a Texas rigged senko. But have no problems with the 894c throwing 3/8oz baits what so ever Matt this is the best Senko rod on the planet On 10/18/2018 at 12:46 AM, WRB said: Do you know the difference between flipping and pitching? WRB you're correct I used the wrong term. I believe they go hand to hand but I'm always pitching. Technology and such with these high speed rods & reels I can PITCH in almost any situation but across my body or skip.. I'm no elite series pro but I'm learning..lol Quote
Super User WRB Posted October 22, 2018 Super User Posted October 22, 2018 Most high modulus rods like NRX are fragile light weight state of the art rods that can't lift more weight then the rod power, 3 = 3lbs lifting weight max. Never high stick these rods, they will break. Flipping is pure lifting the bass out of cover using the rod, that is why I asked. Tom Quote
Matt_3479 Posted October 28, 2018 Posted October 28, 2018 On 10/22/2018 at 12:04 AM, DP82 said: Matt this is the best Senko rod on the planet Perfect I’ve been keeping my eye out for one! Like I said after fishing the 852c it has been working but a more often then not after getting the fish to the boat the hook isn’t all the way through the lip, it just has a bit of a task driving it all the way through. Makes a wicked wacky rig rod, shakey head rod, even used if for drop shot and it did okay with 3/16oz finesse jigs and trailers Quote
DP82 Posted October 30, 2018 Author Posted October 30, 2018 On 10/28/2018 at 11:06 AM, Matt_3479 said: Perfect I’ve been keeping my eye out for one! Like I said after fishing the 852c it has been working but a more often then not after getting the fish to the boat the hook isn’t all the way through the lip, it just has a bit of a task driving it all the way through. Makes a wicked wacky rig rod, shakey head rod, even used if for drop shot and it did okay with 3/16oz finesse jigs and trailers Matt, That 852 also excellent topwater popper, walking bait rod. Happens I saw a used nrx 893 on Fishing flea market on fb. Looks to be in excellent shape. His same was Jordan Mathis. He wanted a trade for a high end Powell but I suspect trading for cash is good option as well..lol I'd offer him 350 shipped. That's 175 bucks off of retail +Tax. Long as you use PayPal your insured for scams and such! Good Hunting and even at 400 it's still a decent deal Quote
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