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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Redlands CA
Posts: 871
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Penn upgrades are a little antiquated now.I mean this is what got Accurate and Tiburon going(Even Newell for that matter)but they both make their own reels themselves now.The reel you end up with wont be worth what you pay for it but thats your call.Accurate is in Corona CA and they have lots of distributors locally but the parts you want will have to be ordered most likely.If you want to hotrod a reel you can upgrade the drag washers and add ceramic bearings.That goes a long ways.I am thinking about doing that to a few reels myself.
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Barachit Baralah,Elohim-In the beginning,God-Genesis 1:1 ![]() "Who among you,if your son asked for a fish would give them a serpent " Jesus Matt. 7:10 |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 478
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Squidco has the kit, and apparently its pretty easy to do. I think it was around $40 or $50. I was thinking about doing it too, but decided to get the Sealine instead. Much better drags in the sealine.
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Canyon Country, Ca.
Posts: 116
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On ebay under penn jigmaster reel parts, there is a seller by the name of jambythesea. He sells a lot of conversion parts and upgrades. A Tiburon frame could be purchased from charkbait....good luck.....
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mellow yellow malibu eXtreme |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Leucadia, CA
Posts: 261
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That guy probably has $200 in upgrades in a $60 reel. If you really want a narrow 501, the Penn kit is $65. My favorite narrow 501 is a Progear 255.
I have several out of date reels I have upgraded. They are still fun to drive. I once had a Sealine 50 but it is too wide when winding jigs, it is out of balance and wobbles and doesn't have enought torque on a big fish. I bought the 40HA (4.9:1) and have landed lots of iron and bait fish with it. |
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#5 | |
.......
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,509
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Quote:
The tib-lite handle alone is forty bucks. I mean if you want to go the nostalgic route it's OK but for the buck your better off buying a narrow Saltist 30T, if your fishing spectra. You'll be amazed at the torque and power of that reel. I grew up using Penns and bought my first jigmaster in 1974, that said they are way behind these newer reels in performance even when upgraded. I still fish Penn 525mags for casting Iron, Penn slammers for spinning, and internationals offshore, but in that size of conventional reel you can't beat the saltists. Jim |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: San Diego
Posts: 89
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Looks like the conversion might not be the right choice, I gather. Also the Sealine-X 40HA 4.9:1 is the reel I should have gone with instead of the 50SHA 6:1.
I'll try and return the Sealine and get the better fitted one as well as leave the Jigmaster as-is and use the upgrade cash on something else. Thanks all!
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Chula Vista
Posts: 1,589
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Like tbone said, the convertions are obsolete these days and not really that help full. When they first came out there were much fewer reel options so turning your old Penn in to some sort of frankenstien was one of the best options. There are so many great reel options now that having a heavy old reel on your rod and a bag of old parts in the garage at around the same price is not needed. The converted reels work well enough and look pretty cool, to me at least, so if you want one or want to do the work your self then go for it. I own a converted "yellow tail special" that I like well enough and still get use out of. It's a nasty old Frankenstien with maroon Penn side plates, red tiburon frame, and an ice blue accurate handle. I have to think that it is a one of a kind. Mike
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#8 |
Deep Release Specialist
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Mission Viejo
Posts: 94
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You don't have to go all in. You can incrementally upgrade as you have money/interest/time. A set of Newell bars/seat or a Tiburon/Accurate frame plus a 501 spool will convert the 500 to a 501. Handle upgrade and the rest are just personal preference. For bait, bass and cuda just stick with the 4:1 gears. The 5:1 gears are weaker (smaller teeth on the gears) than the stock 4:1's. If you go with the 5:1 gears you do want to go with the Smoothie stainless yoke... the stainless gears chew up the stock brass yoke. If you really want a 5:1 reel you'd be better served by getting a reel designed for faster speed with stronger drags.
I have a YTS that started life as an old 113H with maroon sideplates. It now has a matching maroon Tiburon topless frame, Tiburon spool, abec-5 bearings, HT-100 drag washers (including one under the main gear), Newell 4:1 gears with a Smoothie stainless yoke and a ProGear power handle. It's much cooler than anything I can just walk into a tackle store and buy off the rack. Starting again now I'd just get a Penn 113HN Baja Special... it's technically superior even though it doesn't look as cool. |
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