Super User Choporoz Posted December 6, 2021 Super User Posted December 6, 2021 I'd bet I'm not the only one with some of these laying around. Built like a tank. Dug out my dad's old Christmas tree tinsel...the kind made with lead that you cannot buy anymore. He had it wrapped in a newspaper from 1961. 6 Quote
Smalliefan2 Posted December 6, 2021 Posted December 6, 2021 Got my dad's, cleaned it up, still works. Was state of the art at the time. Now ? I like the modern reels. 1 Quote
Super User BrianMDTX Posted December 6, 2021 Super User Posted December 6, 2021 Still have mine on its original Eagle Claw glass rod with “hi-tech” Coors ceramic guides lol. Still works, although as stated above, I prefer modern reels. 4 Quote
Super User new2BC4bass Posted December 6, 2021 Super User Posted December 6, 2021 Dad bought me my Mitchell 300 in 1954. Wish I still had. Even if only for sentimental reasons. Quote
Super User the reel ess Posted December 6, 2021 Super User Posted December 6, 2021 6 hours ago, Smalliefan2 said: Got my dad's, cleaned it up, still works. Was state of the art at the time. Now ? I like the modern reels. Did it have an audible clicker? I have one of my dad's old spinning reels that's in good shape. But it has that clicker and it's quite heavy for its size. Quote
Super User BrianMDTX Posted December 6, 2021 Super User Posted December 6, 2021 Mine does unless the AR switch is on. Quote
Super User NYWayfarer Posted December 7, 2021 Super User Posted December 7, 2021 I still have mine. The paint is chipped but the reel still works. I wouldn’t use it over my newer reels. Quote
Brian14 Posted December 7, 2021 Posted December 7, 2021 Seems like every kid back then had a Mitchell reel. I still have a 300 and the smaller 308, cleaned up and re-lubed they still work well. 1 Quote
Super User slonezp Posted December 7, 2021 Super User Posted December 7, 2021 I've got possibly dozens. Every time a relative passes away that was a fisherman/fisherwoman, I get their stuff. 1 Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted December 7, 2021 Super User Posted December 7, 2021 First 'real' reel I got was a Mitchell 320 for my 8th birthday - way back in '67 I caught everything from sunnies to pike in lakes and ponds, striped bass fishing Cape Cod, and even trout in streams. For several years it was the only reel I owned until I picked up a Pflueger 640 in the mid 70s. Things broke on it, couldn't find replacement parts...as this was before the internet, I finally tossed it...should have kept it. 2 Quote
lo-fi-hi-fi Posted December 7, 2021 Posted December 7, 2021 One of the cooler features is the ability to set the drag on each spool, for different lines on the 300/308/408 models. Quote
Super User BrianMDTX Posted December 7, 2021 Super User Posted December 7, 2021 15 minutes ago, lo-fi-hi-fi said: One of the cooler features is the ability to set the drag on each spool, for different lines on the 300/308/408 models. It’s an easy spool change. But man, it sucked if the line got looped under the spool and got wrapped around the shaft covered in grease. Remember when “skirted spools” was a big selling feature? 4 Quote
Tucson Posted December 7, 2021 Posted December 7, 2021 Wow, a blast from the past. The Mitchell 300 was THE go-to reel in the sixties, along with a fiberglass rod. My brother still likes to pick them up at yard sales. If you A/B them with a modern reel though, they fall a little short. Quote
Super User bulldog1935 Posted December 7, 2021 Super User Posted December 7, 2021 My memories are a little different. I fished through the gears in mine over four years of fall spanish macks from the jetties while in high school. A green Penn would have kept going. 2 Quote
Super User Bankbeater Posted December 7, 2021 Super User Posted December 7, 2021 I've got the 300 that my dad bought back in '72. It was the first spinning reel he owned. 1 Quote
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