It's supposed to rain this coming weekend, thus delaying my Spring boat repairs and prepping. So what to do? Looking through my "vast rod holdings," I found my prized BH Charter Special, sitting there minding its own business, just waiting for the fluke season to get going. Though I love this rod for the specific purpose of handling outsized weighted rigs whilst offshore fluking, I was never truly in love with the handle situation.
Not having an actual foregrip is no big deal when jigging with the typical 2-4 oz bucktails on lighter setups. But going up to 6, 8, even 10 sinkers on the B/S Rig when the conditions go South with this rod? Uggh. Yeah, I'd like to occasionally switch-up from cupping my reel to using a foregrip ahead of the reel seat, in order to periodically give my aching hand and wrist a chance to recover a bit. Except the Charter Special has at best a "ceremonial" foregrip. Well, we're gonna fix that.
Butt situation is fine - except its gonna have to go, in order to build the rod back up from the rear.
First order of business is to strip its handle area completely down to the nekid blank. Gotta get ugly before it gets pretty. Yep, you guessed right, its Ginsu time again.
Annnnd gonzo.
The 1-inch so-called "fore-grip" was next to be Ginzu-ed.
The proprietary blue "Black Hole" trim ring was next - and I can tell you one thing, it was no walk in the park to make this go away. I thought it would be a thin trim washer, over some inner filler, maybe like EVA grip material. Nope, it was solid aluminum, at least 3/8" thick and glued directly to the blank, requiring all kinds of care slicing thru it with two cuts 180-degrees apart for removal.
Not such an easy thing, as one slip with the Dremel, thus scoring the blank ahead of it, or going too deep, thereby hitting the blank - and it's game over. Luckily, no such thing happened, It came off cleanly, with a little help from two pairs of medium-sized Channel Locks.
End Part One
Not having an actual foregrip is no big deal when jigging with the typical 2-4 oz bucktails on lighter setups. But going up to 6, 8, even 10 sinkers on the B/S Rig when the conditions go South with this rod? Uggh. Yeah, I'd like to occasionally switch-up from cupping my reel to using a foregrip ahead of the reel seat, in order to periodically give my aching hand and wrist a chance to recover a bit. Except the Charter Special has at best a "ceremonial" foregrip. Well, we're gonna fix that.
Butt situation is fine - except its gonna have to go, in order to build the rod back up from the rear.
First order of business is to strip its handle area completely down to the nekid blank. Gotta get ugly before it gets pretty. Yep, you guessed right, its Ginsu time again.
Annnnd gonzo.
The 1-inch so-called "fore-grip" was next to be Ginzu-ed.
The proprietary blue "Black Hole" trim ring was next - and I can tell you one thing, it was no walk in the park to make this go away. I thought it would be a thin trim washer, over some inner filler, maybe like EVA grip material. Nope, it was solid aluminum, at least 3/8" thick and glued directly to the blank, requiring all kinds of care slicing thru it with two cuts 180-degrees apart for removal.
Not such an easy thing, as one slip with the Dremel, thus scoring the blank ahead of it, or going too deep, thereby hitting the blank - and it's game over. Luckily, no such thing happened, It came off cleanly, with a little help from two pairs of medium-sized Channel Locks.
End Part One