Question 1: Which brands of Japanese fishing rods are the best? If you are in Japan, you can buy any locally made fishing rod with good quality. The fishing rod technology is small in Japan, but the brand is still good. If so, Shimano, Dawa, and Edogawa are all fine.
Question 2: I would like to ask you all the experts what brands of Japanese fishing rods there are. Dawa, Shimano, Gamma, Zhengxing, Edogawa are the five major Japanese brands, and the top three are the most famous. The ones produced are basically crucian carp rods, usually in parallel. The Japanese rarely fish for carp, as carp is their Feng Shui fish. The ones that hit the market are Dawa's ripple series, Shimano's cool breeze, Qingchunfeng series, and Gamma Carp series. Almost all of the water-town carp in the Yangtze River are designed and developed to adapt to China's fish conditions. It’s best not to buy new poles when going to Japan, as they generally charge a 5% consumption tax. More expensive than domestically. After-sales service is more troublesome. You can check whether second-hand poles are cheaper than domestic ones. Hope this helps you
Question 3: How much does a Japanese fishing rod cost? How about a Japanese fishing rod? If you want a Japanese brand of fishing rod, it is really good. But if you want a fishing rod made in Japan, it is very average. Generally speaking, if the fishing rod companies still produce in China, many of them will not have the strength. The great ones are all going to OEM.
Question 4: I would like to know more about Japanese fishing rods. Does anyone know the ranking of Japanese fishing rod brands? Shangfenji fishing rods (Anji, Chuanji, Zhongtong, Qianda ):
Shimano, DAIWA, and gamakatsu are commonly known as the three major brands in no particular order
Lure rods (iron plate, bass, soft silk):
The first brand of lures, megabass (purely handmade fishing rod) (the reel is OEMed by DAIWA), ZENAQ (purely handmade) and megabass are inextricably linked. The three major brands are Fenwick Eagle from the United States and Abu from Sweden.
Raft rod: Black sea bream factory
Boat rod: three major brands, ecooda, Ji Gongfang
Hand rod, Taiwan fishing rod, sweet fish rod: three Major brands, King of Fishing, Sakura
Don’t ask me why I don’t say Tiga..
Question 5: What brand of fishing rods in Japan is best for just starting out? Let’s get a softer rod. , it is safe to use to catch small and large fish, the big one is not easy to break the line and the small rod has good feel. It's fun to walk fish. Recommend 12-foot Tiger Tetsu and 13.5-foot Suzaku. Special work can be done for one day or one month, but the price is slightly more expensive. When playing Japanese rods, I suggest that if financial conditions allow, buy mid-to-high-end and low-end Japanese rods. There is not much difference between domestic and joint venture brand fishing rods, but the brands are bigger. There is no practical significance in not being able to play with Japanese rods.
Question 6: How about the Japanese Fuji fishing rods? If you are not short of money, I hope you can go to Baidu to scratch your head. Are there Fuji fishing rods in Japan? In Japan, there are hundreds of companies with Fuji in their names, but there are no Fuji fishing rods! There is only one company in Japan called Fuji that makes fishing gear: Fuji Guide Rings, which specializes in the production of guide rings for casting rods, rafts, fishing rods, etc. It is the world's top fishing rod guide ring company. There is only one factory in Langfang, Hebei Province, China that produces fishing rods also called Fuji. The Fuji fishing rods currently sold in the Chinese market are produced in Langfang, Hebei Province. Hebei goods, you know! There are three major distribution centers for fishing rod production in China: Zuoyi, Hebei, and Weihai. Needless to say, Yiwu products are notorious. Hebei pole has medium to low quality and low-cost materials, and is suitable for the majority of working people. Weihai Rod represents the highest rod-making level in mainland China. It mainly produces mid-to-high-end fishing rods. Most of the materials used are imported carbon cloth, which is not at the same level as Hebei carbon cloth.
The poster is not short of money, but he has fallen into the trap of almighty copycats. He wants to buy a Fuji fishing rod produced in Hebei, because it is really Japanese...
Question 7: Please tell me, is the quality of Japanese fishing rods really better? You are asking this because Japanese fishing rods are expensive
In fact, the raw materials and labor costs of fishing rods are the most expensive in China, which is about 400 yuan. About that, the reason why fishing rods made in Japan are expensive is that carbon is a polluting enterprise. Fishing rod factories in Japan charge very high pollution taxes, and labor in Japan is expensive. The biggest difference between Japanese fishing rods and domestic fishing rods The resin material used in Japanese fishing rods is better than that used in China, and the Japanese government does not allow export to China.
Most of the fishing rods in Hebei are made of industrial glue, not even resin. This is the difference between Japanese fishing rods and domestic fishing rods.
Forgot to adopt!
Question 8: Which brand of Japanese fishing rods is the best? The top four brands of Japanese fishing rods: Gamma Kaz, Shimano, Dawa, and Edogawa. As for the price, I can’t answer you. Each brand has many categories, and all of them cost more than a thousand yuan, and the expensive ones cost nearly 20,000 yuan.
Question 9: How to identify the fishing rods produced in Japan? Japanese fishing rods are all marked with their place of origin.
Question 10: How is the quality of Japanese fishing rods? The quality of Japanese fishing rods is also different. Mid-range, high-end, and low-end, I don’t know which one you are referring to. Generally, the cheapest one costs more than 700, and it is still low-end. With this kind of money, it is better to buy a high-quality domestic fishing rod, which is much better than the one from Japan. Just support domestic products and be patriotic! Haha