Captin Obvious Posted August 27, 2008 Posted August 27, 2008 Ok, I've got to buy some rods for tournament fishing and I'm stuck :-/, I've heard good things about bolth brands so you guys are the final vote. which one :-?? Quote
Super User ww2farmer Posted August 28, 2008 Super User Posted August 28, 2008 Whats your price range? What techniques do you plan on fishing? What series of All Stars are you looking at? I don't own any rods from All Star or Daiwa, there are a lot of other good rods out there. I like Fenwick and St Croix. Quote
J_Zink Posted August 28, 2008 Posted August 28, 2008 I fish nothing but All Stars. Titaniums, Platinums, a few Team All stars and an old Classic. Great rods for the money, light, sensitive. Quote
Super User fishinfiend Posted August 28, 2008 Super User Posted August 28, 2008 I have 4 allstars and I like them very much. I think they are very sensitive, are of high quality, and are a great value. If you have an academy sports near you, they were having a great sale on rods. My dad got a platinum that retails for $150 for $100. Quote
Super User Micro Posted August 28, 2008 Super User Posted August 28, 2008 I have several All Stars. I have five American Classics and two Team All Star IM-10s. They are outstanding rods. They are very sensitive and are nicely finished. But I wish the cork was a little better. The cork is good, but not as nice as Fenwick's cork. And the black plastic butt cap seems a little cheap. Otherwise, I've got nothing significant to complain about. My rods have served me well and a couple of my American Classics have been abused and they keep right on fishing. My 7'6" American Classic flipping rod is probably my favorite rod. It will lift a Chevrolet out of slop. Quote
BigBrotherThunda Posted August 28, 2008 Posted August 28, 2008 I like both the Team Daiwa S and the LT's, you really cant go wrong there for the $$ IMO, i do however suprisingly like the Allstar SR's, IM10 blanks with split grip handles that perform very well for 90$, i use the 7'2 jog and frog rod for jigs, tubes, and frogs in heavy cover, and the 7'2 m jerkbait rod for jerks, flukes, and 1/4 oz spinnerbaits 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.