Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

hey guys

 

I know there are a lot of rods made specifically for crankbaits, usually made of a glass composite and are typically more moderate action. but can a similar rod perform almost the same? 

 

Say for example you have a 7ft medium heavy moderate glass composite rod, but instead you use a 7ft medium fast action rod. does stepping down in power allow the medium rod to have more of a "parabolic" action better suited for using crankbaits even though it is fast action? or do you just simply lose backbone to the rod by doing that and it wouldnt make much difference? I was just wondering about your opinions on this...

Posted

I think so but it depends on the particular rod. I have a old Razr 7ft medium power rod that is my favorite wiggle wart /RK crawler rod. I'm sure it was intended for a top water rod or stick bait rod but for me the action is perfect. 

When my boat got hit by the Tornado last July I was more worried about that rod than any NRX.

 

  • Like 1
Posted

 

5 hours ago, BassSteve said:

Say for example you have a 7ft medium heavy moderate glass composite rod, but instead you use a 7ft medium fast action rod. does stepping down in power allow the medium rod to have more of a "parabolic" action better suited for using crankbaits even though it is fast action?

The stiffest/least parabolic rod i own is a 7'2" M-F rod, so id say thats a no for most rods brands as a whole. Theres several M-M rods on the market, but most are very flimsy and weak on the ratings.

 

A cranking rod will help you alot on the water, from reduced strain on the body casting over and over again, to better hookup percentages, etc, etc. But these can get expensive, especially when you need 1 for light cranks, 1 for squarebills, and 1 for deep divers...

 

The best alternatives ive found are 2 options.

#1. Take any MH-F rod, use mono or hybrid for line, and loosen the drag. I fished all the crankbaits my heart desired for years when i didnt have a cranking rod. Didnt lose a single bass from 2-10lbs (although there were several before the drag got loosened).

#2. This is the best alternative to a cranking rod, works great for lipless cranks, crankbaits, even lighter deep divers, chatterbaits, buzzbaits, and swimjigs. The 2 piece (its got to be a 2 piece to get the most parabolic action it can get) 7' MH F (its not a fast, its moderate-moderate fast) Aird X.

It costs $25-55 depending on sales and keeps up with all my cranking rods.

Posted

The step down in power does not affect the taper which is where the blank of the rod bends. I use an old st croix avid x 7ft med/fast exclusively for spooks, traps, mid-divers (dt6), and squarebills (+/-1/2oz), combined with a 10-12lb mono or co-polymer line I have an exceptional hookup/landing ratio. I used to use a dobyns 705cb (7ft mh/mod-fast) for the exact same applications. While the med/fast may technically give up a little power it's barely noticeable in use, but what I feel I gained was better hookset power which is what I attribute to my high hookup/landing ratio. The x-factor here is that different rod companies can vary a bit on their power and taper ratings.

  • Like 1
Posted
17 minutes ago, MediumMouthBass said:

 

The stiffest/least parabolic rod i own is a 7'2" M-F rod, so id say thats a no for most rods brands as a whole. Theres several M-M rods on the market, but most are very flimsy and weak on the ratings.

 

A cranking rod will help you alot on the water, from reduced strain on the body casting over and over again, to better hookup percentages, etc, etc. But these can get expensive, especially when you need 1 for light cranks, 1 for squarebills, and 1 for deep divers...

 

The best alternatives ive found are 2 options.

#1. Take any MH-F rod, use mono or hybrid for line, and loosen the drag. I fished all the crankbaits my heart desired for years when i didnt have a cranking rod. Didnt lose a single bass from 2-10lbs (although there were several before the drag got loosened).

#2. This is the best alternative to a cranking rod, works great for lipless cranks, crankbaits, even lighter deep divers, chatterbaits, buzzbaits, and swimjigs. The 2 piece (its got to be a 2 piece to get the most parabolic action it can get) 7' MH F (its not a fast, its moderate-moderate fast) Aird X.

It costs $25-55 depending on sales and keeps up with all my cranking

thanks, interesting point about it being important using a two piece rod to achieve the effect. I do own 2 dedicated crankbait rods but I was just curious about this 

9 minutes ago, Bass Rutten said:

The step down in power does not affect the taper which is where the blank of the rod bends

yeah that would be the more critical thing, and like you mention different companies go by different standards. a medium fast rod for one company might be more stiff compared to another's medium fast

  • Super User
Posted

Absolutely correct about power / action ratings between rod mfrs, no standard it’s personal preference.

Today I use Major Craft Iovino Splash-It 6’8” MF casting rod for all my utility top water lures, lt T-rigs, square bills and medium divers between 1/4 - 1/2 oz. Suggest looking at MF top water rods they seem to have fast flexible tips and cast the 1/4-1/2 oz lures with ease and enough flex / bounce to feel lure movement well.

Tom

Posted

I can't speak for heavier crankbaits on a fast action rod, but I fish square bills on a Fenwick Elite Tech 7' medium/fast.  With 10# co-poly on a Diawa cc80, it works very well for me and is a pleasure to fish.

 

I fish medium crank baits (up to about 12ft.) on a Dobyn's Fury FR705CB crank bait rod with 12# co-poly.

 

For heavier crank baits (16ft.+) I've gone to a 7'6" H/moderate glass cranking rod with 14# fluoro.  I like the glass rod a lot, and would say the specialized cranking rod is definitely worth it for several reasons.

  • Like 1
Posted
30 minutes ago, The Baron said:

I like the glass rod a lot, and would say the specialized cranking rod is definitely worth it for several reasons

yeah I just ordered an expride 7ft 2 glass composite rod can't wait it will be here tomorrow 😎 out of all fishing techniques, crankbait fishing is my favorite 

  • Like 2
Posted
16 minutes ago, BassSteve said:

yeah I just ordered an expride 7ft 2 glass composite rod can't wait it will be here tomorrow 😎 out of all fishing techniques, crankbait fishing is my favorite 


Nice.  You’re gonna love it. 👍🏻

Posted
1 hour ago, BassSteve said:

yeah I just ordered an expride 7ft 2 glass composite rod can't wait it will be here tomorrow 😎 out of all fishing techniques, crankbait fishing is my favorite 

That's my favourite bladed jig rod... I'm not a fan of glass rods for cranking... 

  • Like 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, MRQturbo said:

That's my favourite bladed jig rod... I'm not a fan of glass rods for cranking... 

well hopefully it can do the job 😃

Posted

That's a good choice. I like glass. Of course I remember when we used glass for jig and worms. 

I've been using The AA Rebound for a while now and  it's great.

Posted

Love cranking, and have 6 rods just for it, but I would say, a medium/fast action rod would certainly work. Maybe mono for a little stretch, and watch the drag setting. Rods actions are not consistent. 
the printed rating on the rod is not a reason to say it will work for only certain methods. If it works for you, that’s all that matters 😎

  • Like 1
Posted
11 minutes ago, Dan N said:

the printed rating on the rod is not a reason to say it will work for only certain methods. If it works for you, that’s all that matters 😎

I guess that's very true for a lot of situations 

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


  • Outboard Engine

    Fishing lures

    fishing forum

    fishing forum

    fishing tackle

    fishing

    fishing

    fishing

    bass fish

    fish for bass



×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.