Calm down. He is making a very valid argument. When casting a rod pretty much no matter how you have the guides lined up there will be some significant twisting of the blank during the cast. Does the flexing during casting cause blanks to break? I know I have had several rods break during the cast (though usually while throwing lures outside of the recommended range), a few break while fighting a fish, and a few break while accidentally setting the hook on a snag or trying to yank a lure out of a tree improperly. Obviously rods can be broken in many ways.Gblaze wrote:
this entire diatribe is pure conjecture - i dont cast that way - I will need more proof . Please re-edit every sentence so it reads - I theoretically believe...blah, blah, blah---- until such proof is provided
I get it now- you just like holding others to standards you dont/cannot follow yourself.
While I don't necessarily agree with Cal's assertion (which he is more or less passing on from Loomis) that spiral wrapping a rod will lead to better longevity, I do believe that without a doubt a spiral wrapped casting rod will perform significantly better while fighting a fish than a regularly wrapped casting rod. Will the rod last longer? Maybe, maybe not. But it will work better while fighting a fish during its lifetime, which is important to me and I would think most anglers.
DaveJ