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Posted (edited)

I have 1 of those and was thinking of cleaning and oiling and give it another whirl on the river for bows. I know it's old technology but can I expect a good smooth drag. I'd hate to lose a fish due to an unreliable and uneven drag.--(that would be a 'reel drag', I guess. Haaarumph)

 

Mitchell 300---for some reason the 300 did not show and I can't seem to change the title.

Edited by Roy
Posted

I have 1 of those and was thinking of cleaning and oiling and give it another whirl on the river for bows. I know it's old technology but can I expect a good smooth drag. I'd hate to lose a fish due to an unreliable and uneven drag.--(that would be a 'reel drag', I guess. Haaarumph)

 

Mitchell 300---for some reason the 300 did not show and I can't seem to change the title.

I cant speak for the reel as Ive never had one.

 

Although I seem to recall many here loving them(could be wrong)

 

If you edit the initial post, you can edit the original title

Posted

I have my grandfathers old 300, and a couple abus. I have fished extensively with the abus, the drags are very smooth. I leave the mitchell on the shelf. Smooth is not a word I've ever associated with the 300. Just my opinion.

Posted

Sometimes the bow spots are a bit of a fashion show, my rod's bigger than your rod stuff.

 

I think it would be fun to show up with a Mitchel 300, also try some minnows and carry them in a 5 gal white pail, a king can of Lucky Lager in the other hand, sounds fun to me

Posted

Sometimes the bow spots are a bit of a fashion show, my rod's bigger than your rod stuff.

 

I think it would be fun to show up with a Mitchel 300, also try some minnows and carry them in a 5 gal white pail, a king can of Lucky Lager in the other hand, sounds fun to me

 

change the minnows to roe, and you have a typical Saturday of egg ballers vs swingers on rivers on the west coast!! Lucky is considered lager of the gods on the island hahaha

 

I'd say your old 300 would handle most bows just fine, I used to use my grandfathers and landed tons of big carp when I first started out fishing in my youth

Posted

When we used them years ago , keeping up to a charging bow was the problem. The retrieve speed was the problem the drag wasn't a problem. Newer reels have better retrieve speeds and better drags. I still use my 301 for perch occasionally.

Posted

Looking back , I amazed we even caught any fish in the 50's and 60's without the GPS, depth finders, electric trolling motors . direct drive, thumb buster casting reels, Mitchell 300's and other antiquated gear. :Gonefishing:

Posted

Looking back , I amazed we even caught any fish in the 50's and 60's without the GPS, depth finders, electric trolling motors . direct drive, thumb buster casting reels, Mitchell 300's and other antiquated gear. :Gonefishing:

Must have been pure blind luck,eh?? ;)

Posted

Looking back , I amazed we even caught any fish in the 50's and 60's without the GPS, depth finders, electric trolling motors . direct drive, thumb buster casting reels, Mitchell 300's and other antiquated gear. :Gonefishing:

Plenty of good old gear. Abu's for example. Never met a 300 that I liked!

Posted

Looking back , I amazed we even caught any fish in the 50's and 60's without the GPS, depth finders, electric trolling motors . direct drive, thumb buster casting reels, Mitchell 300's and other antiquated gear. :Gonefishing:

 

A lot of today's fishermen would be amazed at the basic gear we used back in the day Dave, but we still caught plenty :lol:

Posted (edited)

Ah...the good old days casting a #9 or #11 floating Rapala with my old Mitchell 300 at sundown on Rice Lake at opening in the spring...

 

After it started to sound like an old coffee maker I retired it to the wall of fame at my son's trailer but someone borrowed it and forgot to return it...Grrr.

 

I needed another carp reel a few years ago so I bought a Mitchell 300X thinking it would come with the two spools like the old ones ( one with a small spindle and the other slightly bigger)...

 

The small spindle could hold more line and with a big carp you needed lots of line or get "spooled"...Luckily, a good friend gave me a true carp rod and reel as it was just collecting dust so the new Mitchell 300X is used as a second rod for fishing along our shoreline for crappy, bluegills and bass...

Edited by Beans
Posted

Where the line ran through the bail was fixed and not a roller that created some grooving issues and frayed lines, I used a Mitchell 410 a bluish reel with a high speed retrieve and kept up with no issues on Sept and Oct Steelhead in the mid 70s, although 8 pounds was a big one then, when the 18 pound plus fished first showed in 79, and carried on through the late 80s Cardinal 3s were the norm, although drag washers burned out frequently, and Cardinal 4s were better, but not as popular on the rivers,

Posted

Wonderful topic! I still have 2 older Mitchell 300s. Grew up with them as a teen. My father & 2 uncles used them all the time. They were the best reel to own in the 60s. They were made in France at that time. The Mitchell 301 is the left hand model. I'm a leftie so when they marketed the 301 I went out & purchased 1 right away. Can you imagine a hefty $26.00!! Last year I met an older gentleman (82), on a lake near Sudbury. He had fished this lake for over 50 years. Do you think he knew the honey holes? I took a look in his boat & he was well equipped with 2 Mitchell 300 & the original floating Rapala, black/gold. Seemed odd to me but the ole guy brought in 3-4 walleye every evening. Awesome

Posted

Loved the Mitchell 300. SIts in a place of pride in the house. The bail spring finally went after 35 years of heavy use. My son has an even older original reel that is even more dear to me. My grandfather's Luxor reel. We actually had it out fishing a couple years back. May just have to take it out again this year.

Posted

You'll be fine as long as the bail spring holds out! LOL

HH

 

:lol:

 

I guess you were reading the other post I started re my Shimano bail spring!

 

I didn't realize that the Mitchells were so prone to failure until I read that other post. I must have bought mine in the early 70's for around $20. That was about 1/2 week's wages for me at the time. When my bail spring broke I thought God must be punishing me for my misdeeds----my most valued possession and it was broken so quickly after I had spent my hard earned $$. I never did get used to flipping the bail manually on that 1. That's not the 1 I have now. I picked up the 1 I have now somewhere along the way at a garage sale or somewhere.

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