Review of No 278 Fly Reel by Magnus Angus
Transcription
Review of No 278 Fly Reel by Magnus Angus
Tackle 4p_New style template FF&FT 03/03/2011 09:29 Page 4 TACKLE B AG A smooth operator Daiwa Lochmor SLA 7/8 Ritual reel Charles Clemes 278 reel Handsome reel. Pale gold will turn some people off, but who wants everything to be matt black or dirty olive? Not me. In my hand this feels light, rim to rim the diameter is a fraction over 100mm, a true large arbour but still only 125g (4.4oz). Fit and finish are good. Actually the fit between spool and body is very good indeed; this uses a familiar quick-release mechanism which can leave a little play between the two main parts, very little or none here. The spool release lever is tiny, discrete but thinking of function, when I want to change spools in a hurry, it’s fiddly. Anywhere my hands might touch the SLA when I’m using it has had a lot of attention, very smooth indeed. Inside the spool, where line meets metal, Flush fitting drag knob. the flat surfaces are similarly smooth, the edges around holes are crisp, no ragged line cutting edges but a little more roundedness, more radius, might be comforting. The wooden handle is large enough and the spool is properly counterbalanced. Bringing line in the spool runs free, no check, drag on the way out, silent in both directions. Smooth On the back, the SLA drag knob is incremental fairly flush to the reel, clicks as I drag. adjust. I like that nothing can tangle around the drag knob, but it is fingertip sized and a little fiddly. Daiwa has fitted a smooth drag with a relatively light drag range which adjusts positively (clicks) in small increments – I like that a lot. Having a smooth drag is pointless if I can’t set the reel for my tippet strength. Inside the body, the small drag housing protects sensitive friction surfaces very well – no grit getting in there. The spool hub holds a small one way bearing/clutch, which can be reversed to change the winding direction. This is a 7/8 model and the capacity to deal with those line weights, Daiwa lists this at WF8F and 130 yards of 20lb backing – no arguments from me. Overall, this is a reel I’d use in a heartbeat. I like the large arbour form. I like the silence when the spool turns. I like the smooth drag. I like that I can adjust that drag in small steps very much indeed – the deciding factor for me. Large wooden handle. 76 APRIL 2011 Price: £110 (spare spool £54.99) From: Daiwa stockists. This design harks back to the raised-pillar reels from Sharpes and Hardy my grandfather and his uncles used on their cane rods. This is the 5/6 model for #5 or #6 lines; 278 refers to the spool diameter, 2 and 7/8ths inches. The sample came fitted with a Cortland Sylk line and aesthetically that looks about right – when I pick this up I feel there should be a silk line on the spool and a cane rod waiting for me. It is rather well made, too. The frame and spool are machined anodised aluminium, nickel silver pillars and screws, ivorine handle. Touches there of the link between Charles Clemes and its parent company Anderson Wheeler, who use nickel silver screws in gun making. The adjustable spring and pawl clicks in both directions, louder going out than in, and the pressure can be adjusted with the wee brass wheel by the reel foot. The clicking pawl hides how smoothly the spool turns on its ball race and phosphor bronze bearing, which is the point of a ‘check’, this needs that pawl clicking into its cog or the spool would just spin and tangle the line. Where a vintage reel in this style would have a tiny arbour in the centre of the spool, this has a ‘quarter arbour’, bulking it up slightly so I turn the handle just a few less revolutions when I bring in the line. Where a vintage reel of similar design would probably have nothing but a handle on the face plate, the designers of this reel have opted to pander to modern tastes by matching the handle with a counterweight sunk into the face; nice place for an owner’s name to be engraved and, who knows, maybe the fish of a lifetime will take line fast enough to make it count. As a working reel, this has nooks and crannies where mud and grit will get trapped. The wee check adjuster is fiddly, changing spools is anything but quick and in any case I have no idea if spare spools are even made. I doubt if any of that FLY-FISHING AND FLY-TYING