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Pros and Cons of Reel on Speargun

Printed From: The Fishing Website
Category: Diving
Forum Name: Spearo's Corner
Forum Description: Free-divers & spearos chat about their sport
URL: https://www.fishing.net.nz/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=89904
Printed Date: 03 Jun 2026 at 6:51am


Topic: Pros and Cons of Reel on Speargun
Posted By: Harley11
Subject: Pros and Cons of Reel on Speargun
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 5:56pm
Looking at putting a reel on the Rob Allen.

Do you get more range? No need to drag a float?

What's the pros and cons?

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Spear Diver



Replies:
Posted By: BRUNTY
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 6:15pm
Are you diving from a boat or kyack or off the rocks,


Posted By: Harley11
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 6:27pm
Shore and boat...

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Spear Diver


Posted By: BRUNTY
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 6:41pm
I use a reel quite a bit, I just put fish on my mates float lol
Nice for snooping and weed lines,
Put a reel on and tow your float, you come into good snapper country tie ya float off and off you go.


Posted By: Kona.
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 7:06pm
http://www.wildblue.co.nz/articles/toreelornottoreel/?editMode=1" rel="nofollow - Read this.

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Proud member of the Bluefins Spearfishing Club


Posted By: Nick.
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 7:13pm
Pros
no tangles in floatlines
floatline doesnt get caught up
less restriction when diving (especially deeper)
no floatline pulling you up
others will tow your fish for you (ask Crippy & CampbellWink

Cons
have to drop it if you see a cray, sometimes difficult to find after
diver location not easily seen by other
no floatline to pull you up so stop you drifting deeper than you'd like
not many places to stash your fish, end up clipping small fish to your gun or tucked under your jacket, big fish you leave under a rock and come back to a Moray eating it.
towing a float and drop weight to supplement is tedious sometimes, always have to swim back to it rather than working a one way route.  can supplement float with a boat instead.
may loose gun if shooting big fish


If its your everyday rob allen 110-120, then put a reel on it, learn how it all works, you'll probably love it.  You can always lock the reel off and use a floatline aswell- best of both worlds.




Posted By: Snoop
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 7:31pm
Every setup has its advantages and disadvantages. I've used a RA reel of my 120 Effesub for the last two years. Most of the time I use a plat attached to a 10m rope line that I clip off to my weight belt. I drop the line when in favourable areas or clip it off to the base of kelp stalks. I've found this gives me the best of all worlds. Allows me to hunt without rope tangles or the giveaway float line over boulders etc. Pure freedom on weed lines but have a great dive buddy watching your back in deeper dives as no one will find you without a float line. That and you can borrow theirs for fish

On occasion I have run a 1m line off the base of the gun and have tied off fish but won't be making that a habit. Dah dah..... Regards reel guns and bigger fish - snapper aren't an issue. Reel guns the major consideration - normally talking about big kings (25kg plus models). I've shot them to 20kg using the reel gun but typically I'd be using a separate bigger gun with float line/Hippo float when diving an offshore pin/marlin potential spot. Think the 3 Kings story highlights the need for this

Won't be changing my set ups any time soon. Love the reel gun



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Axemen Spearfishing... "Putting the crap back into elite"
www.axemenspearfishing.co.nz


Posted By: Harley11
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 8:38pm
Does it give more range?


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Spear Diver


Posted By: chalkeye
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 8:40pm
Nope.

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float like a crowbar, sting like a bee


Posted By: chalkeye
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 8:41pm
It would make it easier to add a second wrap, if you're that way inclined.

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float like a crowbar, sting like a bee


Posted By: kolt45
Date Posted: 08 Apr 2013 at 10:02pm
Second wrap? Don't be silly!

Harley, reels are great tools and in my opinion have far more pros than cons.  Don't forget that they are line storage devices, not "casting" devices, so they have nothing to do with the mechanics of firing the gun.  They also aren't used like fishing reels to "retrieve" the fish.  Just like a floatline, the fish is brought in hand over hand.  As mentioned in the excellent article linked by ooh-kona, you have to get used to managing your line, dealing with fish once you have them, and maintaining visibility to your boatman or dive mates.

I often use both and tie off my floatline when I need to, but still use the floatline to store my fish and trying to keep boaties from running me over.



Posted By: BrettB
Date Posted: 09 Apr 2013 at 2:18pm
Use a double wrap n ul never need a reel haha.. Wel, for snapper anyway.


Posted By: SharkBite
Date Posted: 09 Apr 2013 at 2:57pm
Originally posted by BrettB BrettB wrote:

Use a double wrap n ul never need a reel haha.. Wel, for snapper anyway.
This piece of advice is a little gem! Why? Because you are absolutely right BB - you don't actually need a reel or a floatline for snapper, you only need a gun. So if you like the freedom of no float, then you really can just "free gun it". I'd draw the line at not using a gun though...unless...pole spear!

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"There goes another moocher"


Posted By: BRUNTY
Date Posted: 09 Apr 2013 at 3:50pm
Yeah you should step it up a notch and buy a bow , shoot em from the rocks and not get wet. LOL



Posted By: Kinabal Lector
Date Posted: 11 Apr 2013 at 3:43pm
Ive used one for two years or so and think the pros do outway the cons and will only use a floatline for offshore pin diving. I shore dive and kayak dive 90% of the time though. I ususally put fish in kayak I have used drop weight with 5m line and doubled back for it but this is a pain in the butt I admit. Id feel more compfortable around this area in summer using a plat and drop weight. Once I can make an untippable plat



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