I finally got my hands on (borrowed) a 15ft Acolyte Plus towards the end of last season and had three outings with it on the Dorset Stour at Throop. Had plenty of chub including a few 6's but no barbel on it. It handled those chub like a dream. Always with a centrepin and, as is my typical approach, feeding and trotting a prodigious distance, preferring to try and feed the chub into an area well downstream of me. I loved it! Ended up acquiring one for a reasonable price and can't wait to use it particularly in a couple of areas requiring trotting well across.
For comparison I have a Korum 12ft/14ft Glide, had plenty of big chub and a couple of barbel (8lbs+) on it. Not that keen on it at 14ft (too "awkward" for my liking) but at 12ft it's a much better set up and a useful tool. But it's not the first rod I reach for when I'm off trotting. For many, many winters that honour has been with a pair of ancient 13ft Youngs Power Float. I often set up one with a big balsa and the alternate with a short/fat waggler.
Those rods have handled countless winter chub over many years, plenty of 6's and few 7's up to 7:11, all on the float. Had more than my fair share of barbel to 11+ interrupting the chub fishing in that time as well. Then there's the odd sea trout and salmon that take a liking to the bait every winter (don't always land all of those!). Typically 5lb Drennan Float Fish or similar Harrell mainline using small hooks 18s/20s single/double maggot/caster.
I'm very attached to my Young's and they will still be in the quiver this autumn/winter but I firmly believe the Acolyte 15ft Plus will be my rod of choice in a few months time. I should add I like to stand up, preferably in the river, often wading to access a less accessible spot, and trot all day long. The weight and "balance" of the Acolyte when paired with a choice of pins (I tried half a dozen different pins during those three sessions), is one of the factors high on my list. I'll be 69 this winter, a full days trotting is knackering and takes me a while to recover. Hopefully the Acolyte will prolong my enjoyment for a few more years yet!
PS: I looked at the "equivalent" Cadence rod range for quite some time and was tempted. But they and the Acolyte were sort of in the same price range I was prepared to pay. The Acolyte won on all factors.