Super User bulldog1935 Posted Friday at 01:40 AM Super User Posted Friday at 01:40 AM @little giant - the only reason I could justify the SB - intended as an offshore jigging handle - was because I could swap-in the smaller fortissimo knob - I had a place for the 37-mm Livre knob that came from the SB on my low-geared jigging reel. 2 Quote
newapti5 Posted Friday at 04:58 AM Posted Friday at 04:58 AM 3 hours ago, bulldog1935 said: @newapti5 in LP reels, 6- and even 7-geared, 90-mm is just right for me. But when you get to smaller spools and lower gears, you need shorter handles to have control of line pick-up so fish don't out-charge you - you spin a short handle with more wrist, crank a long handle with more forearm. With the 8-geared Super Duty, everything about jerkbait presentation improved with the Livre SB (55-mm pitch, equiv to 110-mm dia). Could count the fish-rate improvement. I do agree on a slow jerkbait reel. My favorite jerkbait reel is a 5 gear ratio Daiwa SS SV. But with today's 8 speed reels, I honestly don't feel the need to wind super fast nowadays. 1 Quote
GReb Posted Friday at 05:59 AM Posted Friday at 05:59 AM I’m in the minority but I like the i shape knobs. However the material is not the same quality as shimano. They get slick and knicked up way too easy Quote
Super User bulldog1935 Posted Friday at 06:06 AM Super User Posted Friday at 06:06 AM @newapti5 I have a place for those fast reels. It's drift-fishing a kayak (with sock) in coast wind up to 20+ kts. Here, I just staked my boat to get out and land the redfish I hooked up - to keep him out of my drift sock rigging, and to keep my boat from blowing across the flat if I lifted the drift sock. In lighter wind, a 7-geared reel is just right, and we fish a lot of calm sloughs, also. 1 Quote
FrnkNsteen Posted Friday at 01:56 PM Posted Friday at 01:56 PM 16 hours ago, bulldog1935 said: hmmm IOS makes the part - a little red loctite, and SLP Works handle works on Stradic as far as using Shimano A knob on Daiwa S spindle, it takes adding an extra bearing or a bearing-size bushing. Shouldn't be news that these knobs interchange - all aftermarket knobs come with the plastic bushing ("collar") for Daiwa - leave it out for Shimano. . That's it @bulldog1935. That step you showed in the image was what Tackle Advisors was referring to that was different between the two and needed to be addressed. I didn't know that some knob makers included a shim. 1 Quote
Super User bulldog1935 Posted Friday at 02:04 PM Super User Posted Friday at 02:04 PM @FrnkNsteen - where I've used common Daiwa-S/Shimano-A knob on Daiwa handle, I just throw in a third 740Z bearing and 0.2-mm shim washer. Since I mentioned IOS SD adapter shaft on first post, IOS also makes hex-shaft adapter that lets you use fixed Daiwa handles on hex-shaft reels. @Bigbox99 the bushings and the bearings are the same size. They should never need thinning - just adjust the stack height with shim washers, which come in 0.5-mm and 0.2-mm thickness from bottom for Daiwa: shim; bushing (or bearing); shim; bearing; enough shims to dial out knob end-play. for Shimano, leave out the first bearing or bushing and 2nd shim. Also with a Daiwa SLPW knob, leave out the first bearing or bushing and 2nd shim. 2 Quote
Bigbox99 Posted Friday at 02:36 PM Author Posted Friday at 02:36 PM You can also repurpose the Daiwa plastic knob bushing as a spacer if needed. If it's too tall a bit of back and forth on some sand paper can fix that. I've done that before. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.