Hi Guys
Lets not get confused - Curran is a biofibre or composite material developed by the guys behind Cellucomp. The material is a reinforced resin/fibre composite - same as most modern composites - except they extract cellulose fibres from carrots to use as the reinforcing fibre. As far as that goes these guys have something rather exciting and I like that its a British and Scottish based innovation. The cheap-shots taken at carrot rods was partly in reaction to the advertising used to introduce the material which emphasised the source of the fibre and gained a huge amount of exposure for the material. I'm more than sceptical about the way their PR company introduced Curran because it was simply not taken seriously thanks to their actions.
Their first rods were actually hybrids, they had a carbon fibre tube at the core and Curran was built (moulded) around that. Carbon fibre for rods comes as a sheet material. Curran is a gel or liquid. IMHO the reason the tackle industry hasn't jumped on it is they don't need to, it involves a complete change in how rods are made and the marketing could be tough. The thinking is something like 'if it ain't broke why fix it?' with a seasoning of 'what will the market reaction be if we introduce a Carrot fibre rod?'
Again imho the material may have mileage but their first rods did not show that potential very well - that's about design and build not the material.
Must be worth a chuck if it,s as light as the Helios dunno
The shrug/question at the end of that is right. Put it this way, I could take a Helios blank and make a heavy dull rod by means of build alone. In their marketing blurb Orivs emphasise the blank because they use an innovative material. But we cast with rods. As it happens Orvis also do a rather fine job of building a rod. The taper design needs to exploit the material and then the build needs to be thought out and designed to get the best from the blank.
Sharpe's were based at Glass, the company went through very tough times due to a program of over-ambitious expansion - buying other companies - among other things. It was then sold to a company called Seoul Nassau. Now it's with Cellucomp. I don't know the exact situation but I think they bought the brand and have some ex-Sharpe's management. That has allowed them to reintroduce Sharpe's rods - which are good. Hopefully the combination of an ambitious company with a radical material plus guys with industry experience will lead to them having better designs and build for their Curran based rods - I don't yet know.
(Meanwhile Chris Baird who was the factory manager for Sharpe's, making nets and reels, has set up independently making nets. He supplies Sharpes and others. Nice guy and the nets are great so I hope that works well.)
I've seen and fondled the new Lamsons - stunning. Briefly tried a couple of new Guideline rods - excellent. Its down to the makers and distributors if and when I get a chance to review stuff.
Magnus
Ps it's Reacter not Reactor -
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