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They look great, Graham.
I currently use the line through ones with a couple of stops but these are obviously a hassle to change.
Are those ones not a bit prone to falling off?
In response to the OP, yes.
I take the tip section off first, place along mid section with tip facing down, then seperate mid from butt. Bit of fiddling to get all lined up nicely then a bit of gardeners soft tie to hold together.
Much prefer 2 piece,really, but a job to get 15ft float rod in...
That would be fine for a lot of venues as long as it can cast reasonably with 3 or 4 oz of lead and bait.
You'd be able to land pretty much anything you could find fishing over clean beaches with that.
It would also work ok for float fishing, which depending on location can catch Wrasse, Bass...
Good initial choice on the rod, you won't go wrong with that but I agree with others that something a bit lighter may be more enjoyable to use on smaller waters.
I used a 1.25lb Drennan series 7 Avon on the Wye this year in low conditions and it was brilliant, great rod if you don't need to cast...
Another vote for Sensor, I don't do a lot of Barbelling , but haven't felt the need to use anything else for legering.
Been using it for my beachcasting for years and never had a problem, cheap as chips as well.
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