I am not talking about cranking down the max drag to fish. This is only a test to show what the max drag a reel has. And that is one of the comparsion from a reel to reel.
How is that a cruado 300 compare to a 300 calcutta to a 253 luna not a apple to apple comparsion? They both have the same size spool. Although the gear ratio is 6.2 : 1 with the curado and 5.0 : 1 with the 300TE, both reel behave the same...
I am surprise a salmon has never charged back faster than you can reel before... I have that experience with Chum... and open sea Spring...
And when I fish Blue fish and striper, we don't crank the reel all the way down to gain line. We fish the same as here; let the drag, the smoothness of the drag to fight the fish instead of our thumbs or fingers...
If the fish is pulling at 12lbs...
How will a 300 calcutta with a drag set at 10lbs with higher torque (like you said) be able to gain line?
How will a Revo STX (just for argument sake with lower torque) with a drag set at 10lbs gain line?
Both reels will not gain any line.
But if both reels set at 15 lbs... both reel should gain line on the fish regardless of the torque.
And lastly, I already mentioned about the braided line. Because of the lower line cap. for the Revo STX, you need to use braided if you want to up the poundage on your fish line and still have lots of line.
Just sharing some information about what I experience. Low profile has been one of those stereotype reel. It is not only for bass fishing. Anglers have asked and asked company like Diawa, Shimano, Abu to come up with inshore low profile, or heavier low profile cause it is just lighter, more comfortable, and preform just the same if not better in some sitituation than the traditional round reel. Hopefully with our discussion, the OP can determine what is good or what is not...