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I was wondering if you'd put the rod into the dreaded j-curve but it sounds like that wasn't the case. There's an art to playing a big fish on bamboo. Here bamboo master @Greg Armstrong shows how to shortline a sizeable coastal cutt on bamboo...I thought he was played out and went to net him, he made a big powerful lunge and crack and snap. Bummer, I was trying to be cognizant with my angles and how I fought them, so I wouldnβt over stress the rod.
Iβve used the 8642 on half pound steelhead successfully, so I wasnβt too worried about fishing it in the float tube.




That Greg guy needs a longer handle net!I was wondering if you'd put the rod into the dreaded j-curve but it sounds like that wasn't the case. There's an art to playing a big fish on bamboo. Here bamboo master @Greg Armstrong shows how to shortline a sizeable coastal cutt on bamboo...
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Here I'm looking nervously at the tip of my 8'6" phillipson while playing a cutthroat of 4-5 pounds. I should be nervous. I've prob got the rod elevated too high...
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But it held together. I too was fishing an old Pflueger that day...
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Although thereβs a βdead spotβ flex at the ferrulesβ¦..bamboo isnβt as strong as metalβ¦..That's a shame, I'd expect the break would have been closer to the tip rather than near the ferrule. I'm wondering if there might have been a weak spot where the section snapped.
Mike
True, but that lower part of the rod's tip section should be more than strong enough to control the trout. I think Mike is right about there being a weak spot there. Rye, are there bamboo nodes at the location of the break? Many rod makers place three nodes at a station, and I learned from Dawn Holbrook to place only two nodes at a given station. There's still the same number of nodes in total, but the staggering never has more than two (sections opposite one another) at a given point in a rod section.Although thereβs a βdead spotβ flex at the ferrulesβ¦..bamboo isnβt as strong as metalβ¦..
True, but that lower part of the rod's tip section should be more than strong enough to control the trout. I think Mike is right about there being a weak spot there. Rye, are there bamboo nodes at the location of the break? Many rod makers place three nodes at a station, and I learned from Dawn Holbrook to place only two nodes at a given station. There's still the same number of nodes in total, but the staggering never has more than two (sections opposite one another) at a given point in a rod section.

I started out with the two-by-two placement, but I have moved to the three-by-three placement in recent years. Dawn is a great rod maker, and I am sure his reasoning is solid. But to be honest I have not had a rod fail at a node with either method. I think IF there is a failure at a node it might be related to an excess of straightening and heat work. If a node is giving me too much trouble I just toss the strip and start with a better candidate. To save a dollar is not worth the headache or risk in compromising a completed rod. But that is just my opinion and what I have found to work for me YMMV.True, but that lower part of the rod's tip section should be more than strong enough to control the trout. I think Mike is right about there being a weak spot there. Rye, are there bamboo nodes at the location of the break? Many rod makers place three nodes at a station, and I learned from Dawn Holbrook to place only two nodes at a given station. There's still the same number of nodes in total, but the staggering never has more than two (sections opposite one another) at a given point in a rod section.
Good choice sending the rod to Dennis for a new tip section. I would have him make 2 sections. Some years ago, he made a new tip section for me.The upside is, I was going to send a rod to Dennis Stone to change out the reel seat and I procrastinated last week. Now he gets two.
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Dave, This is the angle I was working at.
Probably dropped my elbow when I went to net him.