Fishing Gear Fails

Started by jgp12000, May 01, 2026, 02:00:25 AM

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boon

#15
I bought a fairly early production Okuma Metaloid 5N. The early ones had a very heavy foot on them that did not fit well into most rods that would balance with a reel that small.
My wife was fishing with it on a 30lb Okuma rod (you would think Okuma+Okuma would be friends, right?) and we were fishing on a large "workup" mostly comprised of roughly 4-5lb Kahawai (Arripis Trutta, for those following along at home).
Suddenly my wife hooks what could only have been a Yellowtail, which had the rod absolutely horseshoed and the reel humming. She tried to get a lift on it, and the rod bent right through the butt, which was evidently too much for the not-very-good fit between the reel seat and the foot of the little Metaloid, and the reel popped out. She made a grab at it but only managed to knock it into freespool as it fell over the side of the boat, which was probably a somewhat good thing as the reel likely would have otherwise smashed all the guides off the rod on the way to a watery demise.

So the reel is sinking to the bottom in about 100ft of water, braid is still furiously streaming out through the rod with a very unimpressed YT on the end, which promptly finds the reef and busts off.

I get ahold of the braid and start hand-lining it in, but of course the reel is in freespool so I'm just spooling it out, while trying to keep the boat directly above the reel so the braid doesn't get into the reef. 5 minutes or so later and I've wound all 300m of braid off the reel into the boat, but I've come up tight; the reel is stuck in the reef. I drove around it in circles trying all sorts of angles and eventually just pulled harder on it, and wonder of wonders, I got the reel out of the snag and retrieved it into the boat.

I wrote to our local Okuma wholesaler (Composite Developments) with this tale, including the video of me successfully getting the reel back.
They posted me (completely free of charge!) a full set of new bearings for the reel, and the revised reel foot, which is much slimmer. Fantastic customer service I must say, which has been my consistent experience with CD.

oc1


Brewcrafter

Awesome story Boon!  And good on Okuma!  Side note, I have had folks ask me when servicing their older Penn's why I tie around the arbor as opposed to just tie off on the "mushroom peg" and spool away.  This is why. - john

Gfish

I usually use an arbor knot on the arbor, and also do a single loop wrap around the peg to keep it from possibly slipping.
Fishing tackle is an art form and all fish caught on the right tackle are"Gfish"!

foakes

Backpack trip deep into the Western Slope of the Sierra Nevadas at 9000'.

Mid afternoon, after camping at Rock Creek Lake —- decided to take a 1 mile walk over to Frog Lake for some larger Rainbows I knew to be there.  Had 3 guys with me, and they wanted some larger fish for dinner, instead of the 9" Brookies in Rock Creek lake.

This was a few miles West of Big Margaret lake.

Had a Dam Quick 265 Microlite paired with a 5.5' Ultralite Fenwick Rod and 4lb test.  Found what looked like a deep hole, pumped up a night crawler —- and cast it out about 35'.

Set the rig on a large boulder, turned back to check other things just in time to see my rod & reel flip over the boulder and into the lake about 6' out from the shore where it got wedged between 2 other large boulders.

Waded down into the water, retrieved the setup, and reeled in a nice fat 18" rainbow.  Kept fishing, and caught a few more in that size range.

Reel seemed to work fine for the next 3 days.  When I got back home, I broke open the reel —- and to my surprise, there was no sign of any water intrusion, not even a drop.  Serviced the reel anyway, and installed new 4lb. trilene.

This was an example of how watertight some of these old and well engineered reels are when dunked.

This wasn't really a fail —- it was more of an eye-opener on the quality of some reels, and also the importance of securing one's setup properly.

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

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

--

You don't work for your tools — your tools have to work for you...
Set up your shop and workspace accordingly and efficiently.

"The Truth is always the Truth, no matter how many do not believe it...And a lie is always a lie no matter how many people believe it."

jgp12000

I have lost a few rigs over the years pulled off docks & out of boats All my vintage gear have rod floats "stuff" happens ! Good save Fred !