Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
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Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#1I have recently acquired an extremely rare rod from a European rodmaker who is albeit long gone.
His work is exceptional. Yet 1 of the 2 tips has a repair wrap near the tip though and I discovered an as per yet invisible little edge splinter near the middle of the second tip (that was intact till then) after fishing the rod. No idea where it came from. Rod has not been fished for many years so maybe it was just the stress of fishing.
My question now would be if there is a restorationist out there who could rebuild a tip true to the originals, so I have fully intact new tip that I could use for fishing?
There is no rodmaker I am aware of in Europe who could replicate this work.
Wonder if there is someone in the US who could even copy a ferrule, make or get the proper guides and basically match the colour and everything else identical to the original tips?
I know this is a long shot but I am just wondering :-).
I know there are people out there who can replicate Leonards, Paynes etc.. Plus there is probably hardware still available of these companies from deceased rods.
Not so with the rod in question so it basically would have to be copied from scratch.
Thank you for your comments (will of course have an overwrap done and fish both tips :-))!
His work is exceptional. Yet 1 of the 2 tips has a repair wrap near the tip though and I discovered an as per yet invisible little edge splinter near the middle of the second tip (that was intact till then) after fishing the rod. No idea where it came from. Rod has not been fished for many years so maybe it was just the stress of fishing.
My question now would be if there is a restorationist out there who could rebuild a tip true to the originals, so I have fully intact new tip that I could use for fishing?
There is no rodmaker I am aware of in Europe who could replicate this work.
Wonder if there is someone in the US who could even copy a ferrule, make or get the proper guides and basically match the colour and everything else identical to the original tips?
I know this is a long shot but I am just wondering :-).
I know there are people out there who can replicate Leonards, Paynes etc.. Plus there is probably hardware still available of these companies from deceased rods.
Not so with the rod in question so it basically would have to be copied from scratch.
Thank you for your comments (will of course have an overwrap done and fish both tips :-))!
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#2Marcus, I'm assuming that you're talking about Brunner rod.. I wonder what happened to his shop? Isn't there a maker ho use Brunner's tools for making rods in his style?!
r
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- Tim Anderson
- Bamboo Fanatic
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Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#3I suggest contacting Robert Stroh (http://www.rs-flyfishing.com/index.php/en/) in Grünwald (near Munich).
Tim
Tim
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#4I’d consider Callum Blackstone who used to build bamboo rods at Hardy.
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#5Thank you all for your answers!
Robert Stroh is indeed an obvious candidate for sure, thanks for the reminder. Difficult to get hold of him at times but would surely be a good person to ask.
Callum Blackstone might indeed be another option. Both rodmakers would probably charge much more than the rod itself has cost :-D but might be worth it!
Robert Stroh is indeed an obvious candidate for sure, thanks for the reminder. Difficult to get hold of him at times but would surely be a good person to ask.
Callum Blackstone might indeed be another option. Both rodmakers would probably charge much more than the rod itself has cost :-D but might be worth it!
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#6Probably better to fix the existing tip than have another built. If it’s just an edge splinter another invisible wrap would do the trick. A repaired original maker tip still has decent value. A new tip from somebody else will set you back several hundred dollars and won’t add much value to the rod.
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#7I agree with BigTJ. And not all splinters need to have an invisible wrap. A skilled builder may be able to glue down the splinter and do a spot touchup of the varnish that should be invisible. Even the tip that has the invisible wrap could be unwrapped and evaluated. It's possible that even that could be repaired without the need for an invisible wrap. Invisible wraps will impact the monetary value of a rod but the rod's function should still be 100%. Plus, if you never sell the rod, consider it a battle wound that contributes to the karma of the rod.
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#8Thanks all for your advise. I think you are right. I will only have the rod repaired first. If one of the tips fail I will then have a new one made just for safety as its a one-of-a-kind for this well known rodmaker.
I think it will need an overwrap as the area is quite small but broken relatively straight and straight on an edge where high stress is put on when fishing it. Will keep you informed in case it breaks again :-)! Keep fingers crossed it will never break again! Take care!
I think it will need an overwrap as the area is quite small but broken relatively straight and straight on an edge where high stress is put on when fishing it. Will keep you informed in case it breaks again :-)! Keep fingers crossed it will never break again! Take care!
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#9Usually tips got broken because either carefulness (tip against the car door, etc.) or the angle of the rod held during a fight is too 'high up'. But of course you knew that!
Good luck with the repair and let the rod shine many more years!
Good luck with the repair and let the rod shine many more years!
- findwolfhard
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Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#10Is it the rod from Brunner? It can easily repaired, just following his own methods.
Best regards Wolfhard
Best regards Wolfhard
Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#11As a sidenote: I don’t think Calum will be overly glad being called Blackstone, so perhaps we should stick to Gladstone instead
Last edited by DutchWim on 09/19/21 01:44, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Which restorationist can rebuild a tip true to the (very rare) original?
#13Is the ferrule cracked or just loose?
The Can very often be refitted.
Snakes are not that tricky normally to produce.
The bamboo itself is probably the easiest.
Perhaps a full varnish over the butt section as well.
Is the maker confirmed as Brunner, Steyer Austria?
The Can very often be refitted.
Snakes are not that tricky normally to produce.
The bamboo itself is probably the easiest.
Perhaps a full varnish over the butt section as well.
Is the maker confirmed as Brunner, Steyer Austria?