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Shimano, Abu Garcia, Or What?


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Shimano makes good stuff. Saltwater or fresh only?

Saltwater...the Calcutta's are awesome and are durable, but are pricey. Budget has a lot to say what you buy.

But here's the thing...the lever drag systems nowadays are awesome providing a quicker/variable adjustment, but you're getting into big bucks then...as if Calcuttas aren't expensive. I cringe thinking of dropping 300-500 on a reel that I might accidently drop into the ocean or get ripped out of my hand.

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i'll be freshwater fishing for big cats only. the reason i'm going baitcaster to begin with is because of the light tension on the bait clicker and the casting distance you can get, plus the amount of line on the spool

i don't mind paying more for a reel that's going to last me the rest of my life since i only need two, and i'll probably be going used on ebay or craigslist anyway

i know the shimanos are the best, but are they 2-300$ better than the abu garcia 6000s?

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Probably not...but where things pay off is the return policy/warranty repairs, repair facilities near you, parts availability, durability.

I'm about durability and fire and forget...which is why I've had my Penn spinners forever. I gave my bil a Calcutta probably 14 years ago and he still uses it a lot. It's a nice reel and you won't regret it. I have a strange view of reel buying...I'm all about durability but cheap. I personally own an Abu reel (can't remember model off top of my head) and it's pretty hefty for cats. How much they run now?

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heh if you can find some pre-90s zebco reels at a yard sale then they're some pretty damn good reels for what they are

except those goddamn 202s

i'd expect shimano and abu and penns to be lifetime reels, but from what i've read penn are really difficult to use and have various issues associated with them

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heh if you can find some pre-90s zebco reels at a yard sale then they're some pretty damn good reels for what they are

except those goddamn 202s

i'd expect shimano and abu and penns to be lifetime reels, but from what i've read penn are really difficult to use and have various issues associated with them

Yeah...the Penns have a couple of problems, but they are easy to fix. Spinning that is.

No clue on baitcasters. Plus...I know of a couple places on the way down to the beach that repair them pretty cheap. Penn got bought out by a company which is why you see more composite bodies/cheaper stuff/etc. But the oldies are still worth keeping...you can throw them in a tackle box and they're solid and will last for decades.

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