![]() ![]() The drag is silky smooth with a click lever that stays in place. Other high-end components on the Rage reels include a dual drag design, nine stainless steel bearings, a drop gear box and a removable reel foot for easy cleaning or replacement. A cold-forged aluminum sideplate on the crank handle side of the Rage, along with tempered stainless steel gears, add to its overall bullet-proof design. Maxel accomplishes this shedding of unnecessary weight by starting off with a billet of aluminum that is CNC machined with various spaces, gaps and geometric holes in its frame and side to save a few precious ounces, but not sacrifice the metal’s inherent stiffness and strength. At only 14 ounces, it’s easy to hold in your hands all day long with a minimum of fatigue. Right from the get-go, even an untrained eye will realize that this is no ordinary downsized jigging reel, but a high-end piece of well-constructed machinery. My sample featured a black body with a gold spool and trim, and had striking good looks. I requested the micro-sized 25H model in whatever color was available from their kaleidoscope of options and it showed up a few weeks ago. Its predecessors had brought a lot of stripers, deepwater sea bass and tog, summer flounder, cod, pollock and football tuna to boatside for me and my charter customers and I was well aware of the positives and the occasional negatives of the Maxel product line. I currently use the Hybrid star drag and the Ocean Max lever drag reels, so I was anxious to get my hands on a sample of the newest Rage to see how it measured up to its siblings. The Rage jigging reel models represent the top of the line for Maxel. ![]() The heavier Maxel Rage 60H, 90N and 90 are meant to handle larger near offshore and deepwater gamefish, but are still relatively light weight with run-stopping drag capability. The smaller 25H right and left hand models are a huge hit with the “slow pitch” jigging crowd looking for a powerful micro-sized outfit. ![]() These reels grabbed a lot of attention for their smooth gears and drags, combined with a tough as nails construction and do-it-all attitude. ![]() I can guarantee a different brand will sound better on another brand of machine.Introduced last summer at the 2018 ICAST tackle show, Bimini Bay Outfitters made a big splash with the USA debut of their proven high-end Maxel Rage lever drag reels. So if you don't have the means to do these adjustments, then you can only experiment and see which brand sounds best on your machine. However I don't record cassette tapes any more, just use them for the odd playback mainly for archiving tapes from others. I have not really set my machines up for pure metal tapes, but I could. I have my reel to reel machines set for Ampex 456 and the cassettes machines set for BASF chrome. Unfortunately these adjustments are super critical. That has always been professional practice and is the only way to get optimal results. Then you stick to the tapes you have set it up for. So you need to pick a brand of each type that your machine can play and set it up for those types. As you know there a ferric oxide, Chrome and pure metal types. So you have to set up a machine for the correct bias and Eq for one brand for each type of tape. The whole curse of magnetic tape is that ALL brands require a different record bias level and equalization. It all depends on what type of tape your recorder is set up for. ![]()
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