He's obviously attempting to learn how to float fish. Just because you may be able to maintain a proper drift with a spinning reel doesn't mean that the average fisherman can, let alone a beginner.
For the life of me I can't understand why people on hear keep telling people that they 'can' catch fish using ineffective gear/techniques. Yes I could go out and catch a steelhead on a mickey mouse spincast rod using a piece of flagging tape for bait. Doesn't mean I'll be fishing very effectively but sure, if I kept at it I could probably get one.
I'll second BCfisherman97's comments. Go to the Stave. Float. Weight. Bent Rod's Pink Jig. Prawn. You'll clobber them.
Totally agree.
35lb braid? what do you need that for? You can't float fish a run properly using a spinning reel. Tossing blue fox spinners and Croc spoons yes, but not float fishing roe. Take it from someone who has limited out on coho practically every trip this year:
For coho:
#4 gammie, 24 inches or less of 8lb flourocarbon leader, 1.5 inches pencil lead, 20 gram cleardrift or Drennan float, 12lb mono mainline
For coho, chum and spring:
#4 to #1 gammie, 24 inches or less of 10 to 12lb flourocarbon leader, 1.5 inches pencil lead, 20 gram cleardrift or Drennan float, 15lb mono mainline.
Of course the amount of lead or length of leader will vary with the water conditions so those are just guidelines.
Lures or bait in order of preference:
Roe (spring coho or pink) (procure or pautzke)
Blades (colorado or french) if weighted use a spin setup
Jigs (pink over purple) (Chartruese over blue)
Spoons (crocs, koho)
Yarn (peach, baby pink)
Don't be afraid to fish in crowds sometimes. You should have confidence that you will outfish all the others in your run using the setup I have described above.