Ideally the best way to learn is to find someone who can use a baitcaster well and get them to show you how its done.
Failing that try this. Make sure that all brakes are ‘on’ (the usual factory setting) then with a lure clipped onto your trace, hold your rod outwards at about 30 degrees up from horizontal with the reel facing up. Be sure to use a reasonably heavy lure at least half the maximum weight that your rod is supposed to handle, it’ll make your initial casts easier. Now wind in line until the lure is 4 to 6 inches from the rod tip. Next turn the cast control cap clockwise until the spool is locked. Now depress the thumb bar (or button). The spool is now in "free spool" mode but the lure won’t move because you've tightened the cast control knob.
Now, using your spare thumb and forefinger, turn the cast control cap "anti-clockwise" very slowly until the lure starts to drop from it's own weight. It should drop slowly to the ground and stop without you touching the spool. Its now set and should not require resetting unless you switch to a much heavier or lighter lure or you find yourself fishing into a headwind
Now try an overhead cast. Start with the lure hanging about 18 inches from the rod tip and the reel in free spool and trapped by your thumb. Being right handed you would naturally hold the rod with your right hand and wind with your left hand, left handers doing the opposite. Under those circumstances the reel handles should be pointing downwards not sideways, bringing your wrist around into a natural relaxed position helping you to guide the lure in the right direction. With both hands on the rod, try a simple overhead lob. Bring the rod back over your shoulder about 45 degrees to the horizontal, then as the line straightens (you’ll feel it pull on the rod tip) bring it smartly but smoothly forward, releasing your thumb from the spool when the rod reaches the forward position about 40-50 degrees from horizontal. Don’t force the cast, make it unhurried and just concentrate on releasing the line cleanly, even if the lure only goes a few yards. Distance comes with practice. Remember to keep your thumb hovering just over the spool, just close enough to feel the line spinning off the spool and then watch the lure in flight. Stop the spool when the lure hits the water hopefully on target. Piece of cake!
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Friday, June 19, 2009
Down Fall Of Bait Caster Fishing Reels
Many people are discouraged from bait caster fishing reels for one main reason the bait caster fishing reel backlash. The first time I made a cast without knowing what I was doing of course I caused a huge mess of the bait caster fishing reel spool. Some I my friends will not touch a bait caster fishing reel ever again. Spend some time playing with the reel and after a while you wont have much problems and you will like them.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Differences Between Fishing Reels
The bait caster fishing reel varies from spinning and closed faced fishing reels for one main reason. How the line unwinds from the spool. Spinning and closed faced fishing reels the line just pulls off the spool. The bait caster reel has a spool in which spins with the line on usually ball bearings at a very hi rate of speed. You can to apply a small amount of pressure to spool with thumb to keep the spool from spinning faster than the line is being feed out of the rod is one way to help prevent backlashes.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Buying A Baitcaster Reel
I remember fishing down in a river below a dam spillway where the river was very wide. There was only two shoots open in the very middle. I watched as a guy made a cast with a bait caster fishing reel all the way out to the flowing water and was catching fish. My spinning reel could never reach that far with good line and heavy weights. That is when I knew that the bait caster fishing reel was what I had to purchase and master next. The Zebco Pro Staff PS3030 bait caster reel is a professional quality reel for an affordable price.
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