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Thomas & Thomas Vector Rods
The series of fly rods christened Vector further
the trend toward multi-piece fly rods. Vectors are available in both freshwater
and saltwater models and all are designed around a three-piece rod blank
construction.
Saltwater Vectors come in 9-foot models for a 7-weight
line on up to a 12-weight model. What's even more interesting here is
that the same 7 through 12 line weight fly rods are also available in
8.5-foot models.
According to the 1999 Thomas & Thomas rod catalog,
the shorter Vectors "are especially useful under conditions where
the casting target is restricted, such as fishing the mangroves."
Most saltwater fly rodders don't encounter such
obstacles, so it's interesting to see Thomas & Thomas design rods
meant for what others might classify as a "niche market." It
will also be interesting to see how the shorter rods are accepted by the
saltwater fly fishing community.
Though an 8.5-foot fly rod will result in shorter
casts, boaters might find that the short rods are an advantage. All fishing
rods are levers, and as I've said many times before, all anglers are on
the short end of the stick. Fly rods present a particular design problem
because we need the low fulcrum (the grip) in order to cast, but that
long stretch from the grip to the tip gives a distinct advantage to fish
during a battle.
As a fly rod bends under stress, the lever length
shortens, but not so much that things get noticeably easier on our end.
A shorter rod will give you more fish-fight power from the get-go, so
perhaps Thomas & Thomas is looking beyond the mangroves to the growing
flats boat fly fishing market where an 8.5-foot fly rod can come in handy
to lift striped bass and bluefish, and still give anglers casts long enough
to hit the target.
Thomas & Thomas says that the design of the
taper on the new Vector rods affords increased line speed, making the
9-foot models candidates for shooting heads. In fact, Ken Kuhner of Cold
Spring Fly had a chance to test the Vectors at the Salt Lake City trade
show, and said the design was influenced by Nick Curcione. "They
handle shooting heads well," Ken said, "and Nick was stressing
that at the show." Ken said the rods have a narrow diameter that
cuts through the air, adding more velocity to a shooting head cast. He
says he'll have both the 9- and 8.5-foot models in soon, and some of the
8.5s are going right on his boat.
Thomas & Thomas also points out that all Vector
rods are built with oversize guides. It wasn't more than a decade ago
when most 9-foot 9-weight rods were still being built with Size 16 stripper
guides. Nowadays, large-guide fly rod design is common. We can thank custom
rod makers for making the point and saltwater fly rodders everywhere for
driving that point home.
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