Rod Talk!

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cprince
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Rod Talk!

Post by cprince »

I am gearing up to make a decision about a rod or rods for the 2011 bass season. My first order of business will be a frogging rod.

It is not so much the brand that is the hard decision.. it is the ratings that are kind of getting to me.

I thought I would get a heavy stick for frogging. I throw frogs into heavy cover... and I like to throw far. I tend to use heavy Power Pro @ about 50lb. I love the fact that I can get snagged on ANYTHING and I can pull it out and get it back to the boat.

This should equate to a heavy rod... right?

The line ratings.... is it about diameter of line or actual tensile strength? (Power pro 50lb... ummm... what the heck kind of phone pole do I need to match that line to?)

Does the line rating mean a whole lot?

The lure weight... what impact does it have on a cast... or retrieve if I use a lure that is too light or heavy for the stick according to its rating?

Fast tip... what the heck difference does the tip "Speed" make when you are setting a hook on a frog from 50 feet away? I understand more the fast tip thing when you are jigging, tubing, drop shotting, Carolina or Texas rigged...

Thanks guys!

Craig
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Re: Rod Talk!

Post by Bass Addict »

cprince wrote:
Fast tip... what the heck difference does the tip "Speed" make when you are setting a hook on a frog from 50 feet away?

Craig

Remember the day I caught THREE nickels in 45 minutes :wink: 8) :lol:


The fast tip made the difference between getting the whole bass to the boat or just his Lips......Violent hook set 8)
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Re: Rod Talk!

Post by cprince »

Bass Addict wrote: Remember the day I caught THREE nickels in 45 minutes :wink: 8) :lol:
Never saw the report... must have NEVER HAPPENED!!! (Even if I WAS THERE and TOOK THE PICTURES!!!!)
Bass Addict wrote:The fast tip made the difference between getting the whole bass to the boat or just his Lips......Violent hook set 8)
I would have called those hook sets... porno-hook sets!! They were crazy!

Soo... a "Slow" tip would have been harder to put them in the boat? What makes it slow... or fast?

Craig
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Re: Rod Talk!

Post by Bass Addict »

cprince wrote:"? What makes it slow... or fast?

Craig
The give in the top 6 or 8 inches of the rod.........But don't take that to the bank .......I'm by no means an Expert :oops:
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Post by cprince »

cprince wrote:
Bass Addict wrote: Remember the day I caught THREE nickels in 45 minutes :wink: 8) :lol:
Never saw the report... must have NEVER HAPPENED!!! (Even if I WAS THERE and TOOK THE PICTURES!!!!)
Ahem...

Craig
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Post by beachburger »

Spinning or casting rod?

You'll want a fast tip regardless but you'll probably find that a heavy action casting rod won't get the distance from a smaller lure as well as a heavy action spinning rod.

I use a 7' MH, fast tip casting rod for frogs. It's also a good rod for swimbaits, spinnerbaits, chatterbaits and flippin 'jigs (medium cover and edges). I'll use a hi-speed reel for the frog and jigs and will use a slower reel with mono or fluoro for the other stuff.

My .02

Doug
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Re: Rod Talk!

Post by Bass Addict »

cprince wrote:
Bass Addict wrote: Remember the day I caught THREE nickels in 45 minutes :wink: 8) :lol:
.. must have NEVER HAPPENED!!! (Even if I WAS THERE and TOOK THE PICTURES!!!!)

Craig

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Post by cprince »

Thanks Doug... yes it will be a casting rod.

What about the line weight ratings? Any one pay attention to those?

@ BA... #1... pencil reeds.. on the edge/corner?

Craig
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Post by beachburger »

What about the line weight ratings? Any one pay attention to those?
I have 50lb PowerPro but I find it kind of thin for a baitcaster and don't really like it. I'll pick up some 65lb in the spring.
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Post by Bass Addict »

Number 2

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Post by Wallyboss »

My froggin rod is Med. Heavy with an extra fast tip. It is rated for 10-25lbs and I have 65lbs Power Pro on it. And it casts a country mile.
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Post by biggs »

Line ratings for most frog rods are probably going to be between 12-30lbs but that is a mono rating, I believe Shimano rates some rods in braid. I don't really pay too much attention to line rating for frog rods, I pay attention to power/action and lure weight.

I use two frog rods, one is for the heavy slop and one for open water/not so heavy weeds and toads. One of my frog rod is a heavy power extra fast action paired with a 7:1 gear reel spooled with 70lb samurai braid, line rating on it is 15lbs-30lbs (mono). The other is a medium heavy power extra fast action paired with a 6.3:1 reel spooled with 50lbs samurai braid, line rating is 12lbs-25lbs (mono). Both rods are 7'3" in length. I really like an extra fast action for frog rods.

As far as lure rating goes, at the very least use a rod with a max lure rating of 1oz but for me thats a little light. My heavy frog rod has a lure rating of 3/8-2oz and other than frogs it doubles as flipping/pitching/punching rod (this rod is a BEAST!). My Medium heavy frog rod has a lure rating of 1/4-1 1/2oz and other than frogs/toads is also doubles as a flipping/pitching/small swimbait rod but is actually an unbelievably versatile rod (it can handle heavy slop, I just have more confidence in a heavy rod).
Last edited by biggs on Sun Dec 12, 2010 8:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by curls »

On the recommendation of Justin Hoffman, I picked up a Kistler Carbon Steel ($100ish), 7'3" Heavy "Frog'n'Slop" rod for frogs. It casts a frog a LONG way even on 70# Daiwa samurai braid. Hookups are unreal with this thing -- it isn't extra-fast but I'd probably rate it as "fast". Tip is perfectly suited to throwing light frogs but also forgiving enough to not rip too many lips off. ;)

I'd go with something 7'3" or longer, heavy action, fast or x-fast (depends on the backbone too). Lure rating 3/8 (or 1/2oz) to 1 1/4oz or higher. Line rating doesn't mean a ton in this class - you're probably looking at the standard 15-30# rating.
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Post by IanD »

Just about every rod company makes a "frog" specific rod. The "norm" for frog/toad rods is 7'-7'6". Actions range from Med/Heavy to Heavy and most will have a X-Fast tip. The X-Fast tip will launch a frog/toad a mile and allow you to work a frog properly. Normally you do not just straight reel in a frog but work it "walk-the-dog" fashion.
I use two different frog rods. #1 is a 7'3" Heavy X-Fast for frogs. I team this one with a 6:3.1 ratio reel.
#2 is a 7'3" Med/Heavy X-Fast for toads. I use the same reel ratio on this rod as well.
A frog for me is any floating hollow body frog style bait, usually pre rigged with a double hook.
A toad is a solid body chunk of plastic that you rig with a specific frog hook.
I'll go out on a limb here and suggest a Dobyns Champion 735 for toads and a Champion 736 for frogs.
For a little less money you could also look a the Dobyns Savvy 735.
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