I'm a Shakespeare guy, but...

Started by CincyDavid, November 02, 2025, 08:53:36 PM

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OhReely and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

CincyDavid

I grabbed a Penn 712Z on a 7 foot custom rod this morning and threw some lures at the mangroves this morning...didn't catch a dang thing and almost froze to death in the 55 degree air temp but I was reminded of how smooth a well-cared-for Penn spinner can be. I may take the 710 Greenie out tomorrow...

CincyDavid

Both of these reels came from a "bucket o' reels" I bought on marketplace a couple of years ago for $130...got close to 20 working reels out of it and a whole winter of tinkering...TONS of Mitchell 300 variants that I sold, 3 DAM Quicks, kept the Penns, the DAM Quicks and a couple of Mitchells along with a tiny Compac Bantam III that I have fished a couple of times.

OhReely

#2
I love those Spinfishers. I have at least three in every generation from 1 to 6 except gen 4. 15 in total 716Z thru 10500 SSVI. I still think the Spinfishers have always been the best bang for the buck in Penn spinning reels.

I've recently become interested in Quick rotor cup reels but having trouble filling that dance card.

CincyDavid

I keep trying to narrow my focus, but it never seems to work...Shakespeare spinners, 1959-1978ish and a few Bretton spinners...and a newfound appreciation for Penns...and a Luxor here and there, and the list goes on and on.

OhReely

#4
Yup, on and on and on....most of what you said....Penn, Mitchell, Berkley, Zebco, Southbend, D.Q, Luxor....no Bretton....Daiwa, OMG. I don't understand my passion for rotor cup spinning reels. Does anyone know of a 12 step program?

CincyDavid

At the risk of creating havoc in your life, you need to try some Bretton and Zangi...very similar structurally.

Midway Tommy

I'm intrigued by just about any worm gear driven spinning reel and appreciate them all, and quite a few others to boot, but I'm fascinated by the exceptional quality and simple drag adjustment of the ABU, Zebco and ABU Garcia fulcrum drag spinning reels from the '60s, '70 & '80s. They're excellence is so unique that I can't force myself to seriously fish any other style of spinner.  👍 😁
Love those open face spinning reels! (Especially ABU & ABU/Zebco Cardinals)

Tommy D (ORCA), NE



Favorite Activity? ............... In our boat fishing
RELAXING w/ MY BEST FRIEND (My wife Bonnie)

CincyDavid

Tommy, I have never owned a rear-drag spinner. The prices, especially on the little Cardinal 3's makes my eyes water too. One of these days I'll have to try one, see what all the fuss is about.

foakes

#8
Like Tom sez, the Worm-Drive spinning reels from the early 50's to late 80's with metal bodies and robust gearing and material selection —- are all very good reels.

There are a lot of good reels in this category.  The problem for me is that if parts are not readily available, it doesn't matter how good a reel is —- when it breaks —- it instantly becomes a shelf queen. 

I have been fortunate enough to be able to amass hundreds of thousands of new old stock parts for DQ, Penn, ABU/Zebco Cardinals, and Mitchell spinning reels (even though they are not worm-driven, they are excellent reels) over the last 40+ years, by buying out closed tackle operations and 10 of 11 regional distributors, in the case of DQ.

The reels I work on to restore are hopefully meant to get back out on the waters.

The Penn Spinfishers in green or black are certainly some of the best spinning reels ever produced.  And they are smooth and bulletproof.

If parts were available for some of the others like Shakes, Alcedo, Bretton, Zangi, and other "golden age" spinners —- they would be on my list also.

However the reality is that to fix or restore a reel with little, or no parts availability —- to me, just doesn't work.  Too much time is spent trying to source parts, donor reels, postage, shipping, different individuals, expensive parts, and on and on.

Everyone works a little differently, and has different expectations and needed results — for me I just take the road less traveled by most reel techs — and it has worked pretty well. 

So I just stick to my little corner niche of working on DQ, Penn, Cardinals, plus Mitchell spinners for folks who want top quality results to fish with in both function and near new appearance —- without breaking the bank.

Best, Fred
The Official, Un-Authorized Service and Restoration Center for quality vintage spinning reels.

D-A-M Quick, Penn, Mitchell, and ABU/Zebco Cardinals

--


If your feeling down and don't know what to do
     Just hold on til tomorrow
Let go of the past
     Wrap your dreams around you
Live every day like it's your last

CincyDavid

Great points Fred! I don't mind scrounging parts for my own reels but I'd lose my mind doing that for paying customers.