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It is the 9’ 6-weight Sage. Sage
made an old RPL, an RPL+, then an RPLXi. There could even be some more
variations in there. In general they are a fast action rod. The
RPLXi is a “saltwater” series, and I think they older RPL or RPL+
was basically a saltwater rod in higher line weights and a freshwater rod in
lighter lines. They are all pretty good rods, I have the bulk of the
RPLXi series from 6-12 weight along with a 590 RPL that I use when floating
trout rivers. The one thing I’ll say about all these rods is
overload them. I throw one weight above what they recommend because
otherwise they are hard to load up until you get a Tim From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Mark Steudel Is the
rpl 690 a 6wt 9 ft type rod? Seems like a lot of people have this rod? Fast,
medium action? -----Original Message----- I
was using a sage 690 rpl+ til I did something with it? not sure what- been
using a 690 rpl for all my saltwater beach fishing for the past 3+ years for src,
silvers & even the odd chum. My favorite reel is the ross canyon wide
arbor reel. I dearly love the wulf triangle taper lines- they seem to
cast about 10' farther than the rest, for me anyway. I use poppers etc.
& have no problem throwing them.
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- Rod for SRC in Salt The Coles
- RE: Rod for SRC in Salt Tim Harris
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt Leland Miyawaki
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt Bill Hamilton
- RE: Rod for SRC in Salt Mark Steudel
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt Uncle Brad and Elly
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt Tim Harris
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt The Coles
- RE: Rod for SRC in Salt Michael Santangelo
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt The Coles
- RE: Rod for SRC in Salt Michael Santangelo
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt (Part II) The Coles
- Re: Rod for SRC in Salt (Part II) Bill Hamilton
- RE: Rod for SRC in Salt Ransom, Sean

