Bait caster/ pollacking rod

At the suggestion of various members and given the magazines will run a mile from criticising a piece of kit, here is your chance to tell us what you really think about a rod, reel, line, lure... keep it legal please!

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thompo
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Bait caster/ pollacking rod

#1 Post by thompo »

hello

im looking at getting a rod for fishing pollock of rock marks, ive seen a wee Ron Thompson "jerk bait" 6' rod with baitcaster seems like it would do the job rightly and its around £70 my plan would be to load it up up with 30lb braid

just wondering if anyone has any views on these? or simlar deals at the same sort of money.

also will i get a decent fight out of a fish on one of these rods there 6ft long and can cast upto 4oz so there pretty stiff but id like to enjoy the fight of a good pollock
species so far 2007 (18....)
Conger, Codling, Coalfish, Shore Rockling, Dab, Flounder, Dogfish, 3 beard rocking, Pollack, Whiting, Pouting, Red cod, Poor Cod, Tadpole fish, Short and Long splined sea sculpin, TopKnot, Cukcoo Ray,

Targets: fish over 10lb, eel over 20lb (came VERY close almost :( )
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fishinmidget
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Location: Was Galway, but sadly now its landlocked London

#2 Post by fishinmidget »

i tried using a 6ft rod off ballyreen....as a consequence i lost the biggest pollack i had ever hooked. at the moment i am using a 12' abu enticer pike rod and a small multi and it does the job proper. also much cheaper if u get it with a fixed spool reel. you wouldnt get much fight out of a pollack with that gear anyway coz it is basickly a broom handle.
SACN number: 0688

Le rosbif......
thompo
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Joined: Tue Feb 01, 2005 3:15 pm
Location: Belfast

#3 Post by thompo »

aye thats what i was thinking that there probably way too stiff to get any fight out anything, maybe a longer spinning or plugging rod would do the job. im quite fond of the multi's so ill probably be able to find something i can use
species so far 2007 (18....)
Conger, Codling, Coalfish, Shore Rockling, Dab, Flounder, Dogfish, 3 beard rocking, Pollack, Whiting, Pouting, Red cod, Poor Cod, Tadpole fish, Short and Long splined sea sculpin, TopKnot, Cukcoo Ray,

Targets: fish over 10lb, eel over 20lb (came VERY close almost :( )
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fishinmidget
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Posts: 1829
Joined: Tue May 09, 2006 9:23 pm
Favourite Rod: Daiwa TDXS 129pm
Favourite Reel: Daiwa 7ht Turbo
Favourite Fish: Anything
Location: Was Galway, but sadly now its landlocked London

#4 Post by fishinmidget »

well, i do like my multis but i find a fixed spool better. although i am using a 5500 abu with 30lb braid :? :D ....wouldnt reccomend braid again because of it shearing on the rocks which would prob happen wid da little rod.
SACN number: 0688

Le rosbif......
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Ronald
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#5 Post by Ronald »

I regularly use a baitcaster of the boat for pollack landing fish to 7lb ,of the shore would be a different matter ,i'm currently using a 3lb test curve carp rod 12' long and 6010 baitrunner 50lb braid and still having a good fight from pollack of 4lbish but i know its got the bckbone to tangle with bigger fish when they come along .
Wee rods are great fun for dangling baits between boulders or into gullies for wrasse ,but you need a longer rod to get pollack out of the kelp at any range
thompo
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Location: Belfast

#6 Post by thompo »

good stuff been looking at a couple of pike rods aswell was recomended 2.5-3lb test so ill go with something along those lines. Off to north coast tomorrow to try and get one of the bigger pollock :D
species so far 2007 (18....)
Conger, Codling, Coalfish, Shore Rockling, Dab, Flounder, Dogfish, 3 beard rocking, Pollack, Whiting, Pouting, Red cod, Poor Cod, Tadpole fish, Short and Long splined sea sculpin, TopKnot, Cukcoo Ray,

Targets: fish over 10lb, eel over 20lb (came VERY close almost :( )
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petekd
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Location: Cork

#7 Post by petekd »

I always carry my baitcaster teamed with an abu baitcaster reel on the boat, its rated for casting up to 3/4 0z. I use 1 oz leadheads and jellies or shads and its super sport all the way. I've landed pollack and cod to 7lb or so with this set up. I wouldnt however consider it for use from the shore for pollack as it just doesnt have the guts to stop the dives.
Fluff chucking is the new black..... Rampant Wreckfish is a fly angler in denial :D
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lumpy
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Location: clonakilty, co cork

#8 Post by lumpy »

i used a abu bait caster coupled with a 5000 loaded with 20lb braid regurely for pollock fishing, its raited to cast 1 1/2 oz. have had pollock to 11 1/4 on it, cod to 10 lb and a 13 lb coalie. while it does take a longer period to land these fish its still no trouble. one thing i hav noticed is that its alot easier to land fish by using short pumping strokes, it stops the fish getting its head down and makes it more difficult for them to dive. i have used this rod off the shore with leadheads and shads and taken pollock to about 4lbs. one thing is that i was fishing pretty deep marks which means you are fighting the fish pretty close to vertical which in my opinion suits these kinda rods
shore species 2008(25):dogfish(3.1lbs), bull huss (12lb 2oz), bass, shore rockling, coalie, whiting, pollack, conger (22.4lbs),flounder, thick lipped mullet (4.8lbs),turbot,ling (11.2lbs),ballan wrasse(4.5lbs), cuckoo wrasse, pouting, poor cod, cod (9.5lbs), dab, 3 bearded rockling, long spined scorpion fish, corkwing wrasse, plaice, trigger fish, sea trout, garfish


regards neil
pete
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#9 Post by pete »

The Ed Shinkcliffe 'Rock Hopper' spinning rods are ideal for pollock, plenty of backbone when you hook a larger than average fish. I don't know if they make them anymore though.
Sea Species(25) bass, codling, whiting, turbot, seatrout, stingray, pollock, coalfish, longspine scorpion, ballan wrasse, dogfish, ling, pouting, poor cod, dab, mackerel, smelt, sandeel, launce, bull huss, painted ray, thick lip mullet, golden grey mullet, rock goby.
Fresh Water (2) brown trout, sea trout
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Conor H
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#10 Post by Conor H »

I use a 6'6" Uglistik spincast with a Shimano 4000 slade spinning reel (20lb braid) for leadheading for pollock from the boat - great sport.

If I do any spinning from shore marks I use the 9ft uglystik spinning rod with the same reel or the Abu Ambassadeur 5501C3 (left handed retrieve) - with 30lb braid. Same set up for pike.

I prefer the shorter rod, but it's not up to shore fishing (see fishinmidgets post !!) :( .
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Conor
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cky
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#11 Post by cky »

I have a Ron thompson axellerator jerkbait rod matched to an abu 6501c3 lefty reel with 85lb braid which I use for pike only.
I wouldn't dream of taking it to the shore,way too stiff,but it works great for pike.
For spinning at the shore I use either my ugly stik gold 9ft 25-60gm spinning rod with a FS okuma reel and daiwa 15lb sensor or 30lb whiplash braid.(I also use this for pike).
Or a cheap 11ft leeda carbon carp rod rated at 2.25lb torque curve with the okuma reel mounted on it.(again I use this for piking as well)
Or a 6ft ugly stik spin rod (or mini rod as some like to call them:D ) rated at 4-10lb line which cost me £23 with a small reel and load of grubs.I loaded the reel with 12lb braid (like a thread,casts amazing but can break off easy if dragged over rocks).
the two bigger rods will handle the pollack but baitcasters don't work on them as the line rubs the blank when they are bent.
the mini rod is probably the best fun as it casts easily as far as the bigger rods yet really bends when you catch something.again a baitcaster won't fit it :evil:
davy murdoch had a giant cod on a smaller mini rod so they can obviously take the strain but a longer rod would make it easier to fight them from the shore.
best wishes
cky
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pookie5488
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rod

#12 Post by pookie5488 »

ed s rockhopper is now made by fladen and has lost none of its power he changed from normark a few years back i have one but still enjoy the carp/pike rod 2.5 test just as good
Boyd A

#13 Post by Boyd A »

I use an Abu Conlon 300 onehand baitcaster 5/8 oz casting rod , 4600 reel, 20 lb braid on the boat, great fun and no problems provided the drag is properly set. I have also used it off the rocks but prefer a longer rod such as the old Abu 403S to keep clear of kelp.
Incidently, if using a one handed rod, match it to a LH wind reel [ if right handed]; you'll be amazed at the difference it makes.

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