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Phil

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Posts posted by Phil

  1. I had a set on test for a while and to be fair they worked well. Certainly had no problems. The receiver worked really well in some thick fog and the setup did what it was supposed to do.

    Which is why I've seen no reason to buy them.

    I have a set of MK1 delks that I use for perching....if I need to, and a set of Nash r3's, along side a pair of old Fox Sx's.

    The delks with the vibration sensing work really well, especially with species such as perch which hate any resistance.  They also work perfectly well for carp, tench, pike etc.

    My old Sx models are war torn and battered beyond belief but work really well. Despite the casing being cut in half by a rampaging carp, after the mono got wrapped around the casing. (If ever Gr60 needed a bigup...that's it!)

    The Nash R3'S were an impulse buy.  I really like them. Great build quality. The preset sensitivity works well as does the "speed sensing".  

    My point being.  If you want the best bite indication for carp.  If you have the money and want the best bite indication.  Money is no object.  I neeeeeed the best because that's what Kevin mcfairbrass and Mark Delkim Mcblair uses.....

     

     

     

    Buy some floats.

     

     

    No bite alarm will be as accurate  It's 50yrds behind the action.

     

    I like the new Rx+. They looked smart. I've not  been willing to write prose about how they will change your fishing for the better, because they won't. So they went back.

    Good alarms. For what alarms do.  Just think carefully about why you are spending your cash.

  2. On 20/12/2017 at 09:23, yonny said:

    They are just the latest in a range of rods that are obsoleted and replaced each year as a matter of course. We'll not know if they're any good until they're no longer made. Greys rod don't hold their value either - what does that tell you about the long term quality.....

    For that kind of money you can get almost any rod on the market. I'd go with a tried and trusted brand/model. You could get custom Century/Harrison/Free Spirits built for that price.

    Agree 100% with this

  3. Funnily enough I have been looking around for a reel for this exact rod.  I've also been using an old Aero 6010 but wanted something more compact.  One of the best I've found is a 4000 Exage, but it's silver and my brain can't cope with that lol

    On 24/01/2017 at 8:39 AM, DEANO30 said:

    Im in the process of giving my tackle an overhaul and looking for a new reel to couple up with an esp mk2 floater rod i was using an old shimano 6000 ... im after an all rounder for stalking/surface fishing with 10-12lb lines ... i do not want a bait runner ... just something light with a smooth clutch would be nice ... budget of around £80 could poss strech abit more.

     

  4. I use amnesia 15lb for all my pop up rigs, hinged stiff links. i took my first "hard" water using fluro hooklinks in late 90s. again using amnesia 15lb in clear and bottom baits. i think i had the advantage as everyone else was using supple braided hooklinks. so it was a different presentation. so id use it when no one else is.

     

    Brilliant for fishing over a bit of chod.  Amnesia combi's have been a fave of mine too.

     

    I tend to fish fluoro in long lengths, like 18" plus with small D sections.

  5. Hey again I'm looking to sign up for LBAC as suggested 40 quid is well worth it for a year I just have to wait until May, I can see it allows you to fish Claydon, Rackley, Tiddenfoot, Turners lake and River Ouzel. Earlier carpmachine said that it includes some of the canal we were talking about, did you mean the River Ouzel?

     

    Hi Reedy, I think you may have said already, but where abouts are you based?

  6. Its funny but I have heard anglers (carp anglers at that, on another forum) scoff at the mention of forceps.  Comments such as "what do you need those for?" "never needed them" and my total fave.... "if you need those, you shouldn't be fishing".

     

    Growing up unhooking silvers and tiny perch with disgorgers and forceps was like learning to write my name.

     

    Meant to add.  You can practise all of the unhooking methods/tools using a rig and a raw pork chop or chicken breast.

     

    Learning is good. 

  7. It can happen very easily, although it usually doesn't cause damage as severe as this. If a hook pulls with a fish facing any direction other than straight at the rod, the hook has a chance of hooking another part of the fish. 

     

    Unless rules dictate otherwise, I always use a barbed hook. Barbless hooks can move during the fight creating larger holes in a fishes mouth, where as a barbed hook will lock in place and won't slip. The only danger a barbed hook poses to excess mouth damage is when they are being used by anglers that don't know how to remove them. 

     

    I cant see how a barb of any size can stop a hook twisting in a soft medium such as flesh, surely a barb only restricts a hooks movement in one direction?

     

    Barbed or barbless, it sounds as if the fish had either been lightly hooked, or played too hard, or played with an unforgiving setup.

     

    Or lets face it, sheer bad luck.

  8. Lovely looking fish 8)

     

    I haven't been river fishing for too long. Might have to have a day out with a rod and a rucksack soon!

     

    I'm thinking the same thing.

     

    Ive got an old Nash Barbel Elite, 1.5lbtc that is soooo soft.  Might press it into service and fish a few big lumps of 'P's Cheese'  Which has been sat in the freezer for too long.

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