Fishing Equipment
Rods for wire line
It IS a bear to reel in (edit: 200 feet, not the usual 300), my theory is the huge moocher spool means the copper will last longer and when a fish is on it doesn't seem too bad to reel in at all! Don't think I'm recommending my set up is in any way better than a more expensive $300 combo. It's what I ended up with from some gifted fishing gear and I wanted a copper line to mix in with my lead core stuff.
Sounds like good advice here and a good choice on your part. Wire, to me, means 30# stainless with a lead ball and flasher on a roller guide and tipped rod like: the TALORA, OKUMA and SOME EAGLE CLAW rods are set up with. Copper is what you're talking about. Most rods with metal guides and a soft tip would be at least OK for copper. I went with Algoma Hardware's metal line rod with carbide guides that sells for 70 bucks. I was gifted an old moocher reel and put copper on that. Not saying it's the best set up, but it did work for me this past season.
Been using medium heavy 7 ft. shakespere ugly sticks for lead core and copper for years no problem plus cost is reasonable and have 7 year warranty if you use wire make sure they have good roller guides,i built mine 40 plus years ago and use them every season as wire dipsy rods
I use shimano talora rods for copper. Tla 80mc 2 in med. I have also used okumas blt cl 802 in mh for large amounts. The biggest thing is to buy rods that have the big silver eyelets. That’s what the C in the number means for copper or leadcore. Knots will not get stuck. I do not know if you are super new. Make sure you fish with all the copper in the water. Hook the planer board to the backing. Copper or the newer weighted steel weighs allot. For bigger amounts I would recommend offshores new big boards. They work better then church’s big boards. they do not dive as much. They have more floatation.