Had a member send in (5) DQ reels that he had purchased used.
(2) 110's, (2) 220's, and a 330.
Needed to use them for himself — as well as guests at the cabin.
Typical of these is dried up 45 year old grease, bent parts, worn pieces, paint worn off, and other normal issues.
Each got a full disassembly, inspection, Ultra-Sonic Cleaning using (3) types of cleaners, rinsing, drying, re-inspection of parts, burnishing of all interior and exterior parts, replacement of any worn or broken parts, painting the exteriors, reassembly, lube, tune, adjust, and micro-adjust all functions.
This member also wanted a couple of Mitchell ultra-lite 308's — so I built those from as many new parts as possible out of the bins.
All (7) reels are as smooth as sewing machines — and should last another 40 years, if serviced every few seasons.
Ready to ship out.
Best, Fred
Looks better than when they were new! Thanks for sharing.
Fred, you're beyond reel technician, mechanic, repairman, etc...you're an artist and magician! Probably better than new.
Kal
Mate,
Mind blowing attention to detail/workmanship as usual Fred! That man will be in fishing Nirvana when they return, and they will certainly be different beasts then what he had after years of dried up grease, wear and tear. Thanks for sharing!
Cheers,
Andrew
Better than new. Amazing work Fred
I bet he will get a shock, when he, feels how smooth they are, nice work Fred, thanks for showing them, cheers Don.
Behold - The Master at work :)
Good work, Fred...I feel sorry for the fish !
Not many products out there that have someone so skilled at restoring and maintaining them. So many folks have had Fred come to the rescue with parts and service that just can't be obtained anywhere else. Thanks for all you do buddy! 8)
Beautiful work Fred. The Lord has really blessed you with your talents!
It is kind of corny, I guess —
However, to me, it is very satisfying restoring a quality vintage reel — knowing that the angler or their friends and family will be able to enjoy it for another few decades — without breaking the bank — or resorting to buying a new mostly plastic miracle marvel reel from Asia every few years.
These spinners, and others like them — will be more effective, capable, trustworthy, and reliable — then current new reels costing 5 times as much.
And, they have a certain nostalgia about them — that is pleasing to those who understand the difference between solid engineered reels vs. plastic punched out mass produced reels with pot metal components.
A fishing reel is just a tool — but a quality reel — in the proper hands — also becomes a friend for life.
Best, Fred
Quote from: foakes on May 11, 2021, 03:20:06 PM
It is kind of corny, I guess —
Not corny! Most all of my reels are over 40 years old, I fish them regularly. I only have one new reel in my 4 rod/reel spread when I go surf fishing. People come up to me on the beach all the time and they always comment on how cool my old school reels look. I think you are doing a great service in keeping these old reels alive and I hope you are passing your knowledge down so it continues. You have a good gig goin, keep it up!
Great looking reels.
Quote from: Breadfan on May 11, 2021, 06:28:01 PM
Quote from: foakes on May 11, 2021, 03:20:06 PM
It is kind of corny, I guess —
Not corny! Most all of my reels are over 40 years old, I fish them regularly. I only have one new reel in my 4 rod/reel spread when I go surf fishing. People come up to me on the beach all the time and they always comment on how cool my old school reels look. I think you are doing a great service in keeping these old reels alive and I hope you are passing your knowledge down so it continues. You have a good gig goin, keep it up!
The Mitchell's, Z's and Squidder's were good 40 years ago...50....they're just better now with carbon drags.
Thanks, Fred, they look great! Can't wait to put them to use this summer.
Right now I'm still in Baltimore awaiting the arrival of our second grandchild. Back in another week if the baby shows up as expected (due date today).
BTW the 330 was my uncle's Sierra trout reel that (I believe) he bought when he was stationed in West Germany in the late 50's.
Thanks, Rich —
I believe you will find them to your liking — both functionally and as new.
Wasn't going to send them back until you return.
Best, Fred
I like the crab cakes at G&M if they are still open, big as baseballs when I went. Congratulations on the latest grandchild they are a blessing and more fishing buddies. I have a 110N and a 280 Finessa Fred restored for me true artwork, almost too pretty to fish with. I have foam floats on my keepsake poles as well as any I take in the kayak. I learned long ago if you want to keep your poles don't lay them on a dock things happen and I have had a few pulled in even by 1lb bream, even a small catfish will drag a pole in the water off a dock off topic but just saying.
https://gandmcrabcakes.com/
Fred,
where do you get Kroil in aerosol, it's been my goto break free for years? You can literally watch rust fall off rusty hardware.
Quote from: jgp12000 on May 16, 2021, 03:54:01 PM
Fred,
where do you get Kroil in aerosol, it's been my goto break free for years? You can literally watch rust fall off rusty hardware.
Amazon, ebay, Eastwood, etc..
Best, Fred