The Hexagraphs, in single handed and light Salmon weights, were actually really quite nice to use - it was the big rods that were, well, just brutes and best left to seal clubbing.
In contrast, the single handers were nice. I recall a super day afloat on Loch Eilt with a chap (from B&W who was visiting the Rod & Gun shop in Fort William) who had brought along a range of the rods and I fished with the 'Hugh Falkus' Sea Trout special - 10'6" IIRC. It was nice a rod, heavy compared the Shakespeare radial carbon I usually fished with, but a nice thing. I'd try one again as modern lines might do some of those rods a favour.
Reminds me, I once tied a dozen boxed sets of dapping flies. The wood boxes were made by a master craftsman who used to make jewelry boxes. Each box had a dozen flies, some amadou, some mucilin fly dressing. They were high end stuff, back in the day, and all sold without ever being advertised - those were the days
Three of those dapping fly sets went to B&W customers via the Rod & Gun shop in Fort William to match a dapping rod that B&W had produced. This thread has reminded me to look that rod up, I've never seen one.
I wonder if any of those boxed fly sets are still in circulation
I don't even have a photo of one, rather wish I had kept one for myself now