I read this post with interest and havered about replying (in the interests of debate)..... but here we go.
Shakespeare have made some really good rods over the years, I fondly remember my radial carbon 11' (which met an untimely demise on the banks of the Don courtesy of an over-active Salmon) and having tried some of their more recent rods I'd still say they produce robust, quality, value gear that all anglers can enjoy - no argument. Would I chose to buy one
probably not, to be honest. Is there anything wrong with cheaper rods
By and large, no. Fixtures and fittings might be 'value' over higher priced rods but they still cast well enough.
Arguably there are few bad rods out there, some bad lines but more and more the gear is 1st class across price ranges.
So what's the kicker here
Should we all fish with £30 fly rods ??? Well no. I recently fished in a friendly club competition. I set up two 9'6" weight rods, one Flextec and the other an Orvis Recon. Both were 6 weights and both had the same Barrio SLX lines cast on them.
Conclusion
The Flextec was competent but dull, the build is OK but the components are average quality and the cork handle is almost certainly becoming unstuck after 1 trip.
At short range the Flextec was OK but at longer distances it struggled and it's definitely from the noodle end of the stiffness scale. The Orvis was in a different class and - at ten times more expensive - so it should have been
For every twenty thousand VWs Beetles built there's probably one Lotus been built, if I could afford the Lotus I'd buy it. They're both cars..... but one is definitely more capable, a little bit sharper and the other is a VW
Just because one is cheaper than the other, doesn't mean it will suit everyone.
High priced gear has its place and I am fortunate to enjoy quite a lot of it, I appreciate the build, the components and the quality of the product. I might be able to get more or less the same thing from a £30 product as a £300 product but it's not
quite the same. The wise angler these days find a rod they like (might be £30 or it might be £300) and spends their real money on fly lines that do the job. But that's another story.
H