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All
fishing rod blanks have a side that has a predominantly stiffer
side than all the others. Whether the fishing rod is already
completed, or is still an unfinished blank, it is an inevitable
result of the process in applying the matting material to a mandrel,
coating the blank with resin and curing it.
At
180 degrees opposite to the stiffest side is the resultant "second
stiffest" segment of the rod blank. It's easy to
find the "spline" by placing the tip of the rod blank
in the palm of your hand, applying pressure farther down the rod
blank and flexing the blank while rotating it across a smooth surface.
If you are buying a ready-made blank or are designing a new rod
from scratch the procedure is the same.
There
is currently an on-going debate about the placement of guides along
this "spline". In general, spinning rods should have the
guides placed on the OPPOSITE side of the strongest point of the
spline. For a boat rod the placement is just the opposite.
This is the conventional wisdom in building a rod.
Why?
This has to do with torsion and with "beating a fish"
using the blank, i.e. using the entire leverage of the blank to
fight a fish. The greatest leverage is against the strongest side
of the blank. Therefore, boat rod guides and reel seats should
be aligned along the stiffest section of the rod. If they are placed
not on the 90 or 180 degree (stiffest side) the rod will have a
tendency to try to rotate away left or right of center. On
light tackle this is not noticeable in fighting a fish, but is quite
noticeable in casting for distance or accuracy.
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The
current on-going debate among rod builders revolves around fly rod
blanks and whether the rod will be used for distance casting or
for "soft presentations" on smaller chalk streams.
The jury is still out with rod builders trying to determine the
efficacy of guide and reel seat placement on the stiffest side or
180 degrees off that. The basic thought is that if the guides
are configured like a spinning rod then the back cast will be longer
and the ability of the angler to bring a fish in to the net will
be faster. The opposing camp feels that placement of the guides
similar to a boat rod should produce a softer presentation, and
might actually cast farther as well since the "load" on
the blank is actually on the back cast.
The
jury is still out and testing these theories is difficult, because
no two rod blanks are exactly the same so building comparative rods
on the same blank might not be a good indication (one spline might
be more pronounced). Other builders have tried to place guides
on both sides of the blank to test the same blank on opposite sides
of the stiffest spline. Of course this means that both sides
will be "damped" by the additional weight and wind resistance
of the second set of guides. Eventually this will be tested adequately
- but constructing the test is difficult.
In
any case, when selecting a rod from an off-the-shelf situation you
should check that the guides are at least placed on either the same
side or the opposite side of the stiffest longitudinal surface of
the blank. Off-sets from that will cause disappointment as
casting will be poorer (shooting left or right of center) and bringing
a large fish (deep pelagic specimens) to the boat will be much more
tiring, especially on the fisherman's forearms and wrists.
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