I have been offered the chance to buy the last rod mick holgate was building for himself.
it is a part built harrison 14ft gti su float rod. it has a finished handle only.would this rod be the rod for float fish on the ribble for dace to barbel.
was going to treat myself to float rod for my retirement this year as i intend to fish in the day time more so float fishing will be an option .
there have been some good bags of silvers of the river all last season
thanks gary
I have started doing the same thing on a 14ft GTI SU myself. My rod was already fully built on an unground blank. The butt was quite tatty so I have totally stripped and ground the blank. Before I did this I put a 1.75lb weight on it to get an idea of potential ring spacing. Picture below.
The bare ground blank is 153g, the other contributors are right you can get a fully built 14ft powerful float rod weighing considerably less than the GTI SU.
As regards to what a rod is capable of catching, I find it easier to think about the line strength I intend to use. In my case this is likely to be 6lb since I generally fish for chub. So it’s doubtful if I will ever put 5lb of pressure on, and looking at the way the GTI SU bends with 1.75lb on it, perhaps not as much as that.
If you are also considering relatively light line, say for chub fishing, it’s worth remembering that the rod only needs to be capable of handling that weight. If you are using 5lb line for chub, and hook a 14lb barbel, the rod will still only see a maximum pressure of 5lb so the rod only needs to cope with that. If you are setting out to catch large fish you may need heavier tackle but the chub fishing will be less enjoyable.
For me a more lightly built rod than the GTI SU would be a better option, but it was available, it was cheap, and I like using rods I have built myself.
New rings and cork came today looking forward to building it.