Alan Rose
Senior Member & Supporter
I love centrepins and fish almost exclusively with them. I own- and have owned- a modest number of different reels; some old, some new, some true-pin and some bearing reels. Trial, error and personal preference have taught me that my favourite reels are true pins, and on balance I like narrow drum reels best as, to me, they feel right in the hand.
Anyway, as I think all anglers do, I like to browse and geek out (okay, salivate) over rods and reels. I think I’ve noticed a strange quirk- a gap in the market maybe- with reels. Have a look at the J. W. Young & Sons website and there are eight or nine models depending on how you count. Only two are true-pin reels. The bearing reels all look amazing- I mean they really are beautiful pieces- but I don’t want a bearing reel, no matter how pretty it is.
Now, I own a Youngs Triton True-Pin, which is a superb reel, but if I wanted a new true-pin (other than a Youngs Trudex III) I’d have to go down a very expensive route of a bespoke Chris Lythe (£1k ballpark figure) or Garry Mills (half that, but not cheap). That leaves you with the used market, which is fine but potentially a minefield. I’ve got some used ones that are good, but again, the options are limited: Match Aerial or clones, New Hardy Conquest (harder to come by, not cheap and a bit of a marmite reel), Old Conquest (could be good, could be bad), Speedia (again, could be good or bad). You might find a Richard Carter, a Chris Lythe or a Garry Mills, but the second hand prices are stupidly inflated (I blame non-using collectors )
All to say, wouldn’t it be great if some enterprising person could start making a range of really good, useable and sensibly priced true-pin reels? There really is a gap there.
Will it happen? Nah, I doubt it. But a man can still dream.
Now, who’s got a Narrow Drum Fred J Taylor trotter they’d like to give me on permanent loan?
Anyway, as I think all anglers do, I like to browse and geek out (okay, salivate) over rods and reels. I think I’ve noticed a strange quirk- a gap in the market maybe- with reels. Have a look at the J. W. Young & Sons website and there are eight or nine models depending on how you count. Only two are true-pin reels. The bearing reels all look amazing- I mean they really are beautiful pieces- but I don’t want a bearing reel, no matter how pretty it is.
Now, I own a Youngs Triton True-Pin, which is a superb reel, but if I wanted a new true-pin (other than a Youngs Trudex III) I’d have to go down a very expensive route of a bespoke Chris Lythe (£1k ballpark figure) or Garry Mills (half that, but not cheap). That leaves you with the used market, which is fine but potentially a minefield. I’ve got some used ones that are good, but again, the options are limited: Match Aerial or clones, New Hardy Conquest (harder to come by, not cheap and a bit of a marmite reel), Old Conquest (could be good, could be bad), Speedia (again, could be good or bad). You might find a Richard Carter, a Chris Lythe or a Garry Mills, but the second hand prices are stupidly inflated (I blame non-using collectors )
All to say, wouldn’t it be great if some enterprising person could start making a range of really good, useable and sensibly priced true-pin reels? There really is a gap there.
Will it happen? Nah, I doubt it. But a man can still dream.
Now, who’s got a Narrow Drum Fred J Taylor trotter they’d like to give me on permanent loan?