Rob,
It is a five year old Fario 9' #4 4 piece.
Over the years I too have had differing levels of stiffness in my hand. My first proper rod was a Ryobi Masterline Double Top - a two piece rod that had, you guessed it, two top sections. This made for a 9'6" fast actioned #6 or a 10'6" slower actioned #'6. Two rods, one line covered a lot of bases for me and I loved that rod. Fast wasn't actually that fast in those days, more medium.
Then I started at the shop and a lot of rods went through my hands. The fashion for stiffness started around that time with Sage taking the lead and other manufacturers tried to keep up. Bruce and Walker brought out the JTS (John Tomlinson Special) which, although sold as a stiff rod that could carry a whole DT6, turned out to be particularly horrible, spineless piece of carbon which is why you don't see them these days.
Bob Church, a field leader on the stiffness scale as most of his were like pokers, brought out the Dave Shipman Drifter which Trout Fisherman magazine said was a softer action. Well if that is soft then the others must have had blanks stuffed with Viagra pills. Lifting a #7 sunk line from a boat was easy and a DT6 floater went a bloody long way
But all in all it was too much and snapped nylon all too easily. How Mr Shipman could fish his own buzzers on light nylon had me wondering if he ever actually owned one of the rods....
I was slowly moving away from a rod that actually fished towards casting tools.
Loomis GLX #7 came up next and that gave me tennis elbow and a good lesson in line weights as well as a passion for shorter rods. There was one exception to that passion and that was a Clan 11'3" #5 that had a sweet middle, almost through action that threw a beautiful line and tamed everything from trout to salmon. One of the biggest regrets of my life was selling that rod in what can only have been a fit of utter madness. It did start me back down the softer side of the street though, as far as trout rods go.
Sandy's Scott rods were ace as were short Fulling Mill rods and as the flies became smaller (spiders at Haddo anyone?) the actions became less stiff. Not soft but closer to the middle than previous rods.
I now find my Orvis Access 10' #4 a little too stiff but have Skagit plans for that one. It was "based" on the Helios which it fails to match as the Helios has a much better middle action, a clue as to why it was dearer and more sought after. My bamboo is lovely for the close stuff and plays fish nicely because it bends.
I have tried many, many trout rods over the years (but not as many as Rob!!
) and if you were to draw a graph of when the industry told us that we needed a stiffer rod you could pretty much map my ownership of rods! Yes I have been a slave to "fashion" but that "fashion" has come back to usable rods and not something for stirring a fire. Some lines need a stiff rod (Skandi casting works better with one) but actual fishing needs feel and the ability to play a fish. This moment of clarity only comes once you have spent a lot of time and money, definitely money, to reach it. There are many factors that influence, not just the rod makers and it is possibly harder now for a young chap taking up the sport.
Before you all go PC on me I said chap because a girl will just pick up the rod and fish with it. She is not as easily steered as us blokes and will "feel" the rod better rather than trying to hit the far bank with sheer effort and muscle. My favourite fishing phrase, possibly of all time, comes from Jerry French where he states that there is too much "Casterbation" these days and people don't fish the water, they cast across it.
Adverts that start with "do you need extra yards..." suck in us blokes and have us reaching for our wallets faster than Clint Eastwood could draw a gun. Guideline snuck in the Fario in a market saturated with sticks and quietly changed a lot of perceptions as to what constituted a "fishing" rod. Now there are more "fishing" rods available than ever before we are officially spoiled. This only really happened when the makers spoke to the users and that is really only a recent thing.
So what have I learned? The same that I have learned with nearly everything - don't listen to a sales pitch. I had a PERFECT Clan rod and sold it looking for the next best thing which didn't happen until the Fario. I still look at rod reviews, still try as many as I can but now I can stop looking. I tried Hamish's FX1 salmon rod and hated it. The action did not really suit me but it does him. Previously I would have just ponied up the £1000 and bought it because it is the latest thing. A guy I know on another forum calls it The Great Equipment Race, the musthavethelatestthingorIwilldie syndrome and I am off that carousel now. It happens in every pastime and I have stopped running.
I have loved nearly all my previous rods and hated the rest but would not change a thing about how, where and when I used them. Grahams of Inverness have reintroduced the Diawa Whisker 11'3" as a #7/8 Sea Trout and #8/9 Grilse Special because of demand. I may have top pop in and buy one of those as I once tried one that an Irish mate of mine had but never did get around to buying one. As this is based on a rod design over twenty years old it is not the latest thing, OK?
Pity you can't get DT Wetcel IIs any more
Plus ca change, plus la meme chose.....
Euan