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Posts: 192
Location: Quebec, Canada | I had an older Shimano Musky Compre Rod that broke last fall and I have just received a brand new one from the company. What’s bugging me is that when I called and they told me that I would be getting a new one, is that I asked to make sure that they send the same length rod as the older one, which was 8’ tall, but they ended up sending me the 7’6’’ CPCM76MHD.
That being said, it is not a huge problem since I already bought a replacement rod and will just sell that one.
What I find weird, is that the CPCM76MHD model from the website and the rod I receive don’t have the same specifications, even if they are the same model. The one I received is:
7’6’’ Med/Heavy 3/4-8oz
And the one from the site is:
7’6’’ Med/Heavy 2-6 oz
There’s no trace of a 3/4-8oz rod on shimano’s site. Anybody have an idea what is up what that?
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Posts: 218
| Shimano was bouncing around all over the place with their specs before they finally locked in the numbers for their rods. I suspect that they just never updated the numbers on the website when it comes down to decision time. Happens all the time. Rod ratings are whatever the manufacturer decides they are. Go by the feel and actual ability of the rod not the numbers that they assign to it. The rod you got is probably best suited to that 3/4 to about 4 oz. range in my opinion after having handled all the new Compre rods. 8 oz. is pretty aggressive and I think you'll struggle with that heavy of a lure on that rod blank.
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Posts: 192
Location: Quebec, Canada | I think this would be a good suspicion since the rod really didn't feel even close of handling as well 6-8oz range lures as my 2-6oz STC Mojo Musky does. Although, even if I think that STC rods handles always a bit heavier lures than their specification says, 3/4-3 or 4 oz would seems more accurate. |
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Posts: 120
| Pete since u handled all the models, what was ur thoughts on the 8' 6" heavy... good for mag dawg and 10 size blades? Tip heavy? Thank you! |
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