Ex. Heavy regular taper, which has both power to drag the bass out of the cover and good controllability, makes the structure tight with spinner bait, buzz bait, long distance pitching at Leeds and shallow cover for accuracy. Useful as a rubber jig to shoot through and a Texas rig rod.
B Custom It brings a feeler that matches the spinner bait of 1/2 ~ 5/8 oz shallow to 3.5 m range, sliding jig, head lock jig and manmade attack with 1/2 ~ 1 oz. It also supports mudwebers, buzz jets, and spiral minnows that pass through heavy cover edges at a high level.

Sidewinders appeared in the days when light rigs were the mainstream, where lighter and more sensitive rods were being pursued.
With ultra-high elasticity rods appearing one after another, as if going backwards in time, a torque-rich long rod with de-class power at that time cast the question, “What are you going to catch with this rod?” Was done. But our answer was clear.

“It’s a rod for catching big bass” …

In the heyday of the tournament, big bass hunting was only a style of some core anglers, but the sidewinder series that started with only three models of “slap shot”, “super border” and “outcross” is such a core. It was a rod that was created just for the Big Bus Hunter.
This specialized spec was because it was the only one that can handle the strong styles such as slow rolling of heavy spinner baits, rubber jig swimming, and big baits that are now standard.
For more than ten years since then, although there have been slight minor changes in cosmetics, the basic performance has not changed at all, so the rod has been loved.

In 2011, the new sidewinder, which was brushed up with sharpness and high rigidity that you can easily grasp without modifying the long-loved blank, also has a pedigree as the second generation sidewinder carrying the subname of Great Performer. Is firmly inherited.