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Canon all the way for a manual rigger. Much rather crank vertical 200' than horizontal, as stated above.
Quote from: MtnMuley on June 12, 2013, 03:39:17 PMCanon all the way for a manual rigger. Much rather crank vertical 200' than horizontal, as stated above. Totally disagree, I got two scotty, two Cannon and two Penn's, much rather crank the Penn and Cannons versus the manual Scotty. I run 12lbers and run down to wherever the fish are. I run four Down Riggers on my boat as I have enough deck space to do so, with a lawn chair at each one. Granted rather have electrics across the board, but not spending 2.5K for four DR this year. In fact the Scotty's came off the boat to make room for the two new cannons my buddy gave me. A lot easier for sure on the vertical crank, dropping weight is so much easier for the Penn and Cannon types, perfect for folks that are new on the boat, as the slip lever on the Scotty is no conducive with any natural movements. anyone that has fished on my boat has used both styles and of course the Penn and Cannons win out 100% for ease of use and without problems... I adapted Cannon to 5.5 foot extenders and keep the Penn short or angled in towards the boat at 45 degrees or middle... With the width of my boat at 102" and 5 foot of span on each cannon, it gives me a 18ft spread especially with bent pancakes DR Balls on the outside. Might add - limited out on silvers every trip.