Wheatenheimer Posted November 29, 2009 Posted November 29, 2009 A few months ago I was out in the garage looking for something that I don't remember and I found this old Fiberglass fly rod that I forgot I had. I thought, hey it would be cool to strip it down to a blank and put some new components on it..............make it fishable again! So broke the old cork off the handle, cut the guides off and started sanding all the old varnish off the blank. When I got it all sanded smooth, I sprayed several coats of clear lacquer on the blank to get that shine back. I then built a cork ring handle on it. Then I laithed it down to shape. I had a hard time finding a reel seat with a big enough inner diameter to fit the fat fiberglass rod. So I found one close and then filed the inside down till it fit. Wrapped the guides, and threw some epoxy at it and called it good! It's a 7'6" that throw's a 5 weight line pretty good. Think I'll use it on some smallmouth streams next year!
timsfly Posted November 29, 2009 Posted November 29, 2009 Looks good, should make a good smallie rod. Rod looks like new, good way to bring an old rod back to a new life, I really like fishing my glass rods. Tim Homesley 23387 st. hwy 112 Cassville, Mo 65625 Roaring River State park Tim's Fly Shop www.missouritrout.com/timsflyshop
Wheatenheimer Posted December 1, 2009 Author Posted December 1, 2009 Looks good, should make a good smallie rod. Rod looks like new, good way to bring an old rod back to a new life, I really like fishing my glass rods. Tim, thanks for the compliments! Like yourself, I really dig the glass rods. I have a 7'6" 3 weight Lamiglass that I built over a decade ago and have about 60 bucks in it. I have got more mileage out of it than any other rod I have ever owned! Pretty jazzed up about the "new" addition! Thanks again for checking it out! Kevin
Flysmallie Posted December 1, 2009 Posted December 1, 2009 Tim, thanks for the compliments! Like yourself, I really dig the glass rods. I have a 7'6" 3 weight Lamiglass that I built over a decade ago and have about 60 bucks in it. I have got more mileage out of it than any other rod I have ever owned! Pretty jazzed up about the "new" addition! Thanks again for checking it out! Kevin You suck. I really like the new grip. Looks very cool. Â Â
Danoinark Posted December 2, 2009 Posted December 2, 2009 My, my, its amazing how some of these young whippersnappers figure out that glass truly has class and discover its finesse. I definitely have hope for you Kevin. You overhauled a fine piece it looks like. Dano Glass Has Class "from the laid back lane in the Arkansas Ozarks"
eric1978 Posted December 2, 2009 Posted December 2, 2009 The grip is really cool...unique. Well done!
ness Posted December 2, 2009 Posted December 2, 2009 I skipped over this thread several time because I didn't get the subject line. But, I finally figured it out (doh!) and think that sounds like a cool project. I can't see the pictures at work though. Can't wait to get home and see this one. I've been kicking around the idea of doing a fiberglass rod, and have an old and very ugly glass 8-weight that is a candidate for a makeover. This may just be the inspiration to do something with it. John
ness Posted December 10, 2009 Posted December 10, 2009 Finally got back to look at the rod. Nice work there! I'm curious what you finished the blank with, and how you applied it. John
Wheatenheimer Posted December 10, 2009 Author Posted December 10, 2009 Finally got back to look at the rod. Nice work there! I'm curious what you finished the blank with, and how you applied it. Hey Nessie! Thanks for givin' it a look! When I stripped all the old hardware off, I sanded and sanded and sanded some more. I started with 600 grit and worked it down to wet-sanding the blank with 2000 grit to make it nice and smooth. Then started putting very light coats of Valspar Hi-Gloss Clear Laquer that I picked up at Lowes in an aerosol can (wet sanding with that 2000 grit between coats.) After maybe 8 to 10 coats, I finally got a sheen that I was satisfied with. I encourage you to get on that old ugly 8 weight and make her pretty! It really wasn't that hard and cost very little, not to mention it was a lot of fun! Thanks again and good luck! Kevin
ness Posted December 10, 2009 Posted December 10, 2009 Thanks for the info. I would have been scared to sand on a blank like that, fearing I'd get down into the fiberglass. But, really I've got nothing to lose with that old war club of mine. I'm gonna put that on the (ever-growing) list of things to do this winter. John
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now