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Thread: opinions wanted

  1. #11
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    They are heavier than some of the others but they will be in rod holders you will never notice it I have some of the 143t and they are some kinda tough!!!


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  2. #12
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    I have 2 Bass Pro crappie max 14' now, It's hard to lift the rod out of holder with fish on. THe 16' Acc Crappie Stix I fished with recently were a bunch lighter even being longer.

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bassing_53 View Post
    thanks everyone. I was leaning towards the southern's, but I am a little concerned about weight.
    THe 143 series are 9 ounces compared to the crappie stix 7.1. No clue how noticeable 1.8 ounces would be
    Negligible, your not holding a jig pole all day just sitting it in a rod holder. If 1.8 ounces makes or breaks the deal I dunno what to tell ya... I can say this southerns will have more backbone. We need it down here are smallest crappie or a pound or two

  4. #14
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    I was looking to order a rod from ACC but every time I checked, the rod that I wanted was out of stock. After repeated checking, I gave up. It seems that ACC keeps a very low inventory based on my experience. Spawning crappies waits for no man, so I had to look elsewhere. If you settled for ACC rods, you might want to put your order in early if they're not out of stock.

  5. #15
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    just wondering why the weight of the rod would matter if its in a rod holder ?
    in my opinion the tougher rod is the way to go if you are leaving it in a rod holder 90% or more of the time .
    my 2 cents
    sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales
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  6. #16
    Javelin 180 is offline Crappie.com 1K Star General * Crappie.com Supporter
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    SCR's is my vote I have about 16 of them and I'm fixing to order 4 more they don't seem any heavier than any other and they are defiantly tough as nails and Ed Duke is one of the nicest guys I've ever talked to.

  7. #17
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    ACC all the way. Super lite rods with plenty of back bone. Most sensitive rod I've used for crappie and they are made right there in Illinois. You can slightly g slabs and not worry about braking them.

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  8. #18
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    Well you asked for opinions and that's all this is. All I can tell you is, I'm going on 77 end of this month and I have no problems with the 14' Southern Rods.
    Good luck opinions wanted


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    What time is it? IT'S CRAPPIE TIME!
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  9. #19
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    THe 2 bass pro rods I purchased are very heavy and hard to lift out of the rod holder. Ad the weight of a fish, sinker etc and it makes it worse.
    I was very fortunate to have the opertunity to fish grenada lake, the couple that took as with them had 16' ACC Crappie Stix. The were very comfortable to use. That's the only reason I am concerned about weight

  10. #20
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    Southern crappie are tough rods,but i wouldnt pick them for a spiderrig rod,tips are to fast and bounce alot in windy rough conditions.H&h and acc i have never used,capps and coleman and bgjp's are excellent spiderrigging rods though.

    Sent from my SM-S907VL using Tapatalk

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