For fishing salt water about 5-15 full days each year AT MOST,
I'm trying to decide between:
1) Buying a top quality 600-650$ Reel: Hardy, Nautilus, etc.
2) Buying a decent 200-350$ Reel: Sage 2200-4200 etc
3) For 650$ I can buy 18 of 35$ reels that I can drown in the salt all I want and they will last me minimum 40 years!
The reel will be used for the occasional pink salmon & cutthroat hunt during the each season, as well as possible future vacations to the tropics.
Past experience with salt:
I used a brand new 35$ reel for 20 minutes in salt. An hour later, I came home, took it apart, rinsed it, dried it. 6 months of freshwater salmon use later, and dunking into fresh water, it was hard not to notice severe rust on the drag gear & drag clicker needle & spring. The drag needle has a chunk missing from the tip, covered in rust. Users of the flyfishing groups on facebook said it looked like the reel went through a LOT of abuse. (See pictures to judge for yourself).
After reading dozens of forums, this is the conclusion: many 300$-400$ saltwater reels are flawed, as the sealed drag actually leaks. Preventative soaking and lubing maintenance did not help.. so 50$, 50%, 50$ to send it back and back again to sage, etc, only to discard it and buy a new one.. What is your experience? What are your maintenance costs?
If I will buy a 300$ salt water reel to use 1 week in the salt, and have to spend 50$ or more each year to maintain it... isn't it just better to stick with a 35$ reel that handled the biggest of fresh water chum, EASILY.... and once it breaks, (in a year or longer) to buy a new one for another 35$?
I am tempted to spend 600$ on a amazing reel, however there are too many reviews out there that say its not much different in durability than a cheap one - just takes a year or two longer to rust. Worse, the drag often "seizes up" during the trip of your life time! I'm not sure you can just turn off the sealed drag on an expensive reel, or remove it entirely, like you can on a 35$ reel...
I had a 110$ Milano tournament rod that I upgraded to a 300$ Orvis Clearwater rod, and feel no difference in casting ability or fish catching. In fact, they both broke on me and had to be replaced (the first was my learning rod, so it had a few nymph impacts to the blank in its early days) (the second had the fly line wrap around the tip, and shear it off, while landing an angry fish!) Stuff breaks. It happens. I do assume that it's my fault, my luck, my bad habbits. I don't try to destroy equipment on purpose, however when it comes to hooking up with a fish, I will focus on fishing (correctly) but not babying gear... However, according to forums, an accidental extra dunk - or - two - in the saltwater does huge damage to a saltwater reel over time. A reel is a reel.. a mass produced hunk of metal... why does it cost more than an mid level custom built supercomputer?
Is my thinking just "cheap"? Would a 300$ reel with plenty of preventative maintenance survive for a few years, or will it rust only 2 years after a 35$ reel would? Would I buy a 600$ reel and just have fun with it and soak it over night, or would I have to baby it while fishing from the beach or flats?
My cheap 30$ light spinning reel was used in the salt 10 years ago for half a dozen days, to catch my first Coho. I never washed it, never lubed it. It rolled around in sand, was submerged plenty of times.. Works like a charm to the day! No rust inside... Smooth, drag is perfect.. Yet a BASIC circular reel with 1 moving part rusted like that after 20 mins of salt and 6 months of fresh..