Brilandyoung Posted May 30, 2023 Report Share Posted May 30, 2023 So my rod that I use for my glides is 1-5 oz and I was looking at a glide that was .1 oz less that 5.would that be a safe thing to do or should I steer around it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SockeyeSteve Posted May 30, 2023 Report Share Posted May 30, 2023 A rod rated to 5 oz and you're looking at a 4.9oz glide? Personally, tie it on and send it, but it's not my rod that I paid for. It's best to typically stay within a rods "weight class" but as long as you're not massively overloading your rod you should be fine. Weight ratings are very subjective and comes down to feel of individual anglers and other rods characteristics besides the lure weight rating. I fish with 2 guys semi regularly and all 3 of us have varying opinions on what rod to throw certain baits with. Prime example: 1st guy fishes much more conventional and lighter gear because we generally fish rivers for salmon but when lakes open up he will break out bass gear. Dave will throw a K9 which is about as big of a glide as he will throw on a ML mod-fast rated for up to 3-4oz I can't recall exactly off the top. But that bait is tipping or even out of that rods ability, he seems to have no trouble. 2nd guy and I fish for bass constantly even when the steelhead are running and he won't throw a K9 on anything under less than his XH LDC 3- 8 oz where the K9 is at the bottom of that rods capability. I typically fish a K9 on a Heavy X-fast taper rated 2-6oz which puts the lure weight smack in the middle of the weight class and it's a breeze to cast all day. That's how I've always fished my whole life, trying to keep lure weights closer to the middle of a rods weight class and I like a faster taper whenever I can get away with it. That's not to say that I've never fished outside a weight class because I certainly do and haven't ran into much trouble yet I just prefer to not. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brilandyoung Posted May 30, 2023 Author Report Share Posted May 30, 2023 17 minutes ago, SockeyeSteve said: A rod rated to 5 oz and you're looking at a 4.9oz glide? Personally, tie it on and send it, but it's not my rod that I paid for. It's best to typically stay within a rods "weight class" but as long as you're not massively overloading your rod you should be fine. Weight ratings are very subjective and comes down to feel of individual anglers and other rods characteristics besides the lure weight rating. I fish with 2 guys semi regularly and all 3 of us have varying opinions on what rod to throw certain baits with. Prime example: 1st guy fishes much more conventional and lighter gear because we generally fish rivers for salmon but when lakes open up he will break out bass gear. Dave will throw a K9 which is about as big of a glide as he will throw on a ML mod-fast rated for up to 3-4oz I can't recall exactly off the top. But that bait is tipping or even out of that rods ability, he seems to have no trouble. 2nd guy and I fish for bass constantly even when the steelhead are running and he won't throw a K9 on anything under less than his XH LDC 3- 8 oz where the K9 is at the bottom of that rods capability. I typically fish a K9 on a Heavy X-fast taper rated 2-6oz which puts the lure weight smack in the middle of the weight class and it's a breeze to cast all day. That's how I've always fished my whole life, trying to keep lure weights closer to the middle of a rods weight class and I like a faster taper whenever I can get away with it. That's not to say that I've never fished outside a weight class because I certainly do and haven't ran into much trouble yet I just prefer to not. Thanks man I appreciate it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BPayne Posted May 30, 2023 Report Share Posted May 30, 2023 Keep in mind that ratings and their accuracy are dependent on rod company. Some companies rate their rods accurately…some over…some under. That being said, a lob cast can be utilized to stretch the boundaries pretty far safely. BoatSquirrel 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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