The only gripe I have with this reel is the weight, but that goes with the size of the reel ru-vid.comUgkxM68VkfsQhHaabDce1IwOCXuvumcpbZ_k . I brought this salmon fishing up in Oswego, NY. I coupled it with a Cabela's Whuppin Stick. I had no problem pulling in a 14lb salmon. I will probably use this for surf fishing this summer and downgrade to a 3500 series Battle II next salmon season to save my wrists. All of the operations are butter smooth and the bail is nice and thick and has a solid flip to it. Everything about this reel is sturdy and strong. The drag system held up to the salmon and was also super smooth. I did use a scale to set the drag properly before going out to the river and this worked out tremendously. A bunch of other guys on the river would hook up and snap almost immediately. Just because you have a good drag system doesn't do anything if you don't set it correctly.
This comparison is ridiculous. How can you compare a Penn Saltwater reel that weights almost a pound and a half to a bass reel that might weigh 11 ounces?
😅I cant beat Shimano. 45 years and still using my first reel. I've taken in about 6 000 mackerel pillock gar ling cod Whiting red Gurner dog wrasse more and even s sea slug, that won me a competition for 'biggest variety' I also have a Penn four for African fishing...sailfish wahoo Dolphin fish= Dorado, not the usual pet like dolphin king fish barracuda etc. But mainly Xhimano and Daiwa. I rate Shimano highest.
Big Penn & Shimano fan here. I like the Shimano Bait-Runner series of spinning reels. The Shimano Charter-Special (a lever drag) is also a favorite reel of mine. Penn Reels that are 50+ years old are still fishing reliably (with minimal/easy maintenance), and my old 940/930 are still good-to-go reels. The Mariner, though bulky and awkward, is an excellent wire-line trolling reel. Tx 4 da video !
I have the older Sharky 3 with a all aluminum body. It's a 1000 size with 33 lbs of drag 😅. It's about 3 years old and i haven't used it much. Ive ordered a very nice Kastking Perigee rod I'm going to put it on . There's nothing wrong with their products. Look stuff over when you get it. They replace anything quick. Keep everything clean and oiled. Like anything should be. I thought about a Diawa , Shimano and almost ordered the new Okuma Cyelio but why ? It seems I would be getting less at the same price range. You want a spinning reel that can be submerged or sprayed with water....Kastking has the Spartacus 2 . It's definitely a bargain. I almost ordered it. Why when I have a Sharky laying around.
I can tell everyone that the Daiwa BG is the best here . And the Penn Battle lll is second . but with that being said Shimano has some real high end as well . Plus i do own Daiwa BG8000 Saltwater and the Penn Battle lll 8000 . Daiwa holds more line and has 6 plus1 ball bearing plus 33 Lb max Drag and 5.6:1 Gear ratio 53.3" per turn . the Penn Battle lll has 5 plus 1 Ball bearing plus 30 Lb max Drag and Gear ratio 5.3:1 44" per turn. The Daiwa Runs Real Smooth when Reeling in a Big and Heavy Whale of a Fish. Oh one more thing they both are the same price 159.95 $ at lest it was may have changed .
I use the sharky 3 baitfeeder 5000 on a bnm silvercat elite 7'6 rod and have caught several 50+ lb flatheads had the reel 2 years cleaned and re oiled/greesed 4 or 5 times still runs smothe
I have some Penn reels for the kids and friends to use and have my Shimano reels (from flats -trout and redfish to -pompano & jacks off the jetties) for myself cause I like their smoothness casting and steady drag .
@@leonolszewski4302 that's tricky mate. I've got 30lb sufix 832 braid on that reel. It all depend on your set up and how you handle the fish after hooking it. I most of the times match that with an 8 footer daiwa hype PE 2/4. It's my casting rod. The set up is solid enough for a decent tuna (not one of those 400 kg monsters but I'm sure 80kg tuna wouldn't be a problem if I took my time and work the drag out. Biggest one I've caught was a 32kg Spanish mack
Penn are good reels (Sargus ; Battle; Slamer top) but spare parts forget. I waited 6 months plus 5 months to have repaired two of my Penn reels. PePENN NO MORE
I have a very bad experience with the daiwa bg. I purchased one to use for paddlefish in freshwater, and to use in the salt whenever I go to the ocean. Unfortunately it didn’t last 2 fish. Hooked one paddlefish and during that fight the main gear popped a couple teeth. It was annoying to listen to but still usable. However on the second paddlefish the bail arm broke completely off.
The Penn Slammer 3 came out in 2016 and the title here is best of 2023. Penn has obviously made other reels since 2016 including a stainless steel Slammer 4 DX, torque 2 and Penn Authority. More research should of been looked into or the title changed to possibly best buy for the money
@@antun57able i don’t understand why people say this I’ve literally caught my biggest striper ever on sharky 4k which was 39” and almost 30lbs. Left it outside throughout the winter, dropped in sand,dunked it, and took it apart to service it and there was no sand anywhere nor was there corrosion.
Yes my friend thanks im retired all ready I look forward to go back to Colombia to do some fishing im leaving in London the life here is good but to go weekend fishing you have to lucky to get a good time to fish any way I start getting my equipment ready here is easy in Colombia is to expensive I have tree reels to choose from shimano daiwa and today I find this one penn which I remember back in the days was made in America every thing is made in china but friend recommend again see what happens anyway my friend I think you American I have so many people from USA to teach me like carpentry I do like as well well appreciate you help I hope I see you again we have big river in Colombia I will enjoy thanks 👌👌
As someone who’s been in the sport since the 70’s I will tell that todays Penn reels might be smoother than in the past but they aren’t as durable, drag systems aren’t as good and over all construction is junk compared to what they used to be
@@theburtons49 I primarily surf/jetty fish but occasionally fish from boat and back bay but all saltwater. Vintage reel 100% Penn greenie if you can find them, most guys that own them won’t sell them. As for new all of my surf/jetty reels are van staal but unless you are getting wet while fishing you don’t need to buy them, for all other fishing I do I have Daiwa Saltiga and Shimano Saragossa reels.
@@lamiglass1 You really think the modern drags on high end penns aren't as good as vintage models? The tech and materials in their drags are way better than anything on an older penn. And what makes you say they're junk ? I just bought a slammer and spinfisher earlier this year and they work great.
I have also had a bad experience with the Daiwa BG. I have a 4000. If I tried to set the hook and missed the fish the handle would spin backwards very fast. Happened the second time I used it and then every time I used it. If I hooked the fish it would not do it. Guess I needed to be better setting the hook. Anyway I could not return it to the store where I bought it cause I didn't use it right away. Had to send it to an authorized Daiwa repair facility in Florida. It took months for them to get the part and repair it. Once returned it was fine but I would not buy another one.
I have two KastKing Spartacus 2 for a little over a year now. I've caught so many Large Redfish from 21" to 46"! The onky issue is it has a plastic cap opposite side of your handle that snaps easily but KastKing has sent me 2 replacements no questions asked.
Cuando uses el Shimano Spheros SW del 2021 cambiarás de opinión, el Daiwa BG del 2016 es muy buen carrete en ese rango de precio pero el Spheros puso muy alto el liston.
Hello and how are you doing today? My Question is why? is it anybody are giving the right Honest review of this product? is it because you all are getting it for free?? and you must give the right review so you can get another free things from them??
What's so good about a revo 3 ? I know it won't outperform or outlast a slammer stradic or bg. It has a graphite v- rotor and who want's graphite parts ?
@@moseskongi4746 I just sold my revo3 X, 2023 version. I do not like the feeling when I stop retrieving. It feels like the roator can not stop immerdiately when I stop turning the handle, then the roator will strike the reel body. Once I noticed the strike I notice it. I know the feeling does exist because of the physics. I tried my old 2014 Shimano Sahara, it does not give that much striking feeling as the revo3 x does. I believe it may be caused by the design of the roller bearing used in the revo3 X. Just two cents I want to add.
The only reel I can handle underwater in the sea, and when I come home in the evening rinse off with fresh water, some WD 40 and be able to fish again the next day without any problems!!!
I have old series BGs and the new version. The new are pretty good too. The old BGs were an upgrade from the Silverseries models- also Tanks. The 4000c was a beast along with the 7000 and 9000s..
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BG or better Daiwa. Shimano is hard to beat. Penn sucks ass, way to expensive and parts cost an enormous price now. Not the Penn of old. Okuma is hands down the best budget reel out there. I own over a dozen.
@matthew mercer I have a Penn 9500 SS circa 1990’s. It took a salt water bath when it ended up in the drink when the rod holder snapped off after something Big took off with it. Fished it out and did not recall any water seeping in. Only thing that went awry was a clicker switch/knob that came loose. My Brother has some old Penn models he is Still using. I had an Okuma 4/0 reel I bought to replace my Shimano. I liked the Okuma better. I also have an Okuma spinning reel I bought in Oahu that seems pretty solid.
I have fished exclusively Penn Reels - particularly the Battle series for 10 years. everything from the 6500 to the 25oo. starting about 4 years ago - The quality has gone to hell. The last 2 I had to send back because of manufacturing issues, bail flip was hard - often had to do it by hand instead of just cranking, spools were not finished smoothly, crank was questionable at best. . I no longer use them. I'm not paying premium prices for a reel that the manufacturer has decided to save 6 cents in manufacturing - compromising the quality. They are pretty much garbage. I am now fishing Shimano - mostly integras - Great reels
1500 and 2000 bg both weigh 8.5 oz, witch is same as what my old reel weighs and I'm used to, but these only have 4.4lbs of drag. The 2500 size has 13lbs of drag but is heavier and I don't know if I want to use a heavier reel when I'm making casts all day. They really fucked up making those smaller reels with only 4lbs of drag. That's stupid.
I own three of the above mentioned the Kast King Sharky 3 in 5000 series the penn battle in 5000 for surf and dock fishing the penn edges it out on smoothness but the kast king has not let me down yet used both for 3 + years now as for the bay I use daiwa BG 3000 and Daiwa fuego in 3000 those are my go to's I have fought flounder, redfish and trout's without a hiccup.
Penn reels aré the Best fishing reels of the world 🌎🌍 from USA to me you & Other people whose love fishing sport forever ❤❤❤😊😊😊 I love my pennfishing takle 😊😊😊
This appears to be a video from someone that neither fished, nor serviced any of the reels. Although that's not to say that the reels are not good products or good values. The comparison is the problem.
That WAS a good Shakespeare reel. I'm not so sure that make really good reels anymore. Their rods are good. I have a couple of vintage Shakespeare reels in the closet. They're the old Mitchell type.
I'm not an expert but if I was looking at a penn setup for bass, I wood first take a look at what kind of water I fish. Does it have alot of cover / structure (i.e., brush, rocks, vegetation), or is it more like a reservoir out west and southwest that doesn't have as much bass habitat? If it's the first type, I wood get me the 4000 size battle and put it on a medium heavy rod. The reel is only 12 oz and holds 260yards of 20 lb braid with 15lbs of drag so it wood be more than strong enough to overpower a bass to keep it from running into structure to cut you off. If it's the latter though, I wood get the 2500 sized battle. It should be good enough for any bucketmouth you hook up on. Ways less than 10oz and can hold 220 yards of 15lb braid with 12lbs of drag.
I bought a sharky 2 a couple years ago because they got good reviews. Lubed it up first day, rinsed after fishing brackish, maintained properly, and it busted after about a year. I’ll never buy Kastking again; might as well be Sougaliyang to me
It's my personal opinion and with all my respect to you. I would have put Kastking Kapstan Elite instead of any of the Penn models. Kapstan Elite in any of its sizes offers much more in terms of price and features than Penn
@@umami0247 I am changing my comment. I did the test of submerging the Kapstan Elite 3000 in saltwater twice on different days and waited a week to uncover it and my surprise was that the reel had saltpeter inside and also the seals were not well placed. The costumer service of Kastking sent me a new reel. I also did the same test with the Penn Spinfisher and found no saltpeter inside.
The penn Slammer 111 is the most advanced shown here from Penn which is odd as hell since Penn released these in 2016 and the title of the youTube is best of 2023. The kapstand elite came out Dec 24th 2021.