Originally Posted by
midwestexile
If you are casting a heavy rig and the bail snaps shut when you cast, you can snap the line and send your rig flying toward Cuba (they are "friends" now, huh?). The bigger the sinker, the more expensive. For guys in the northeast with striper plugs that can run up around $20 that is a much more painful loss, so some remove the spring for the bail flip to make at manual. The risk of the line snap goes up with heavier plugs and/or harder casts, so straining to reach breaking fish means break-offs happen at the worst possible time. That is at least one reason for the popularity of PUM (bail-less) on heavy-duty surf reels like Mitchell 302, Penn 706, Van Staal, and Zeebaas. There are online tutorials for intentionally disabling these functions in other reels too. [Perhaps we could work out a deal to give loving new homes to unloved bail springs from Massachusetts or Montauk.]
The claim I have read is that not only do casting reels not have any risk of this bail issue in the surf but a shock leader of about double the rod length should be wound onto the spool to prevent dangerous break-offs as the cast starts. At 10 lbs for every 1 oz of weight for this safety leader, you end up with 60-80 lbs mono as the shock leader, which would cut you finger if used on a spinning reel. I am sure 60-80 braid would not sever a finger, but it could certainly hurt more if you heavy-cast frequently or if you bare-hand grabbed the leader in the surf to beach a good fish. The claim is also made that conventional reels without cross-wind cast further than spinning -- perhaps true for the elite but not for mortals like me.
Frankly, although professional casting competitors and elite surf anglers might need this equipment, most people who have it are like people buying the same clubs Tiger Wood used or wearing a Farve jersey for backyard football -- hoping for magic. I wish I had the problem of casting so hard and so far that I was a danger to myself or others without safety precautions. I'd settle for a #r model hat on the pier.