Angling Times (UK)

Carp from the ice – we test Daiwa’s new Yank ‘n’ Bank pole to the limit.

Daiwa’s new Yank ‘n’ Bank Pro Power pole has it all...

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SPURRED on by the success of its iconic Yank ‘n’ Bank rods and poles, Daiwa has extended the range.

Among several new items, the 14.5m Pro Power Pole is the subject of this week’s live test. It comes with enough spare top kits to cover every commercial fishery scenario and is built around the same fast-taper mandrel as the new 13m Power Yank ‘n’ Bank pole, with sections that fully interchang­e with the current 9.5m Yank ‘n’ Bank model.

The Pro Power pole is designed to be that little bit more robust than its stablemate­s and is built from the same high-modulus carbon fibre cloths as many of Daiwa’s far more expensive poles.

However, the cloth from which it is cut has different specificat­ions to give added power and awesome section wall and joint strengths.

Built like a tank it may be, but it certainly doesn’t handle like one – it’s as nimble as a sports car, with a fair turn of handling pace.

I discovered that and much more while testing the pole at Miracle Baits boss Steve Gregory’s super-popular Rushfield Lakes complex – although with the car’s temperatur­e gauge reading minus two, it was never going to be an easy day. Ice was forming at an alarming pace across the surface of Canal Lake and I found my confidence rapidly ebbing away.

However, this L-shaped lake is jam-packed with fighting-fit carp, which put up a devilish scrap even in the coldest of water conditions.

I rigged up with a 6mm disc of punched bread set to fish at dead depth in the deepest water – no feed, just the hookbait.

Just to make things even more interestin­g, it started snowing (that Beast from the East again!).

Luckily, before hypothermi­a could disable me, the float gave a little waggle and disappeare­d from sight. Oh joy! With a lightlyset No8 hollow elastic streaming from the pole-tip, the fish charged straight underneath the ice.

I was reminded of something my Angling Times predecesso­r Dave Woodmansey once wrote – he described a carp pole as having ‘enough pulling power to drag a snarling Alsatian from its kennel’. This time around it was a very angry carp that needed extraction.

Playing a decent fish underneath ice will exert an awful lot of stress on a pole. You need to keep piling on the pressure, but you can’t see where the elastic is going – all you know is, you need to keep it and

your rig line well away from the razor-sharp edges of that ice.

At this point you learn the strengths and limitation­s of a pole. And I can happily report that the new Yank ‘n’ Bank Pro Power does exactly what the name suggests.

Should you have a recalcitra­nt Alsatian that needs dragging out of its kennel, get yourself a Yank ‘n’ Bank Pro, tie some hefty elastic to the dog’s collar, and give it go. Trust me, the dog will move first!

Price: Expect to pay around £765

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 ??  ?? Piling on the pressure, I soon tamed this carp.
Piling on the pressure, I soon tamed this carp.
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 ??  ?? This carp tested the pole’s mettle under the ice.
This carp tested the pole’s mettle under the ice.

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