Anywho, I recently picked up this Hendryx reel and was wondering if anyone had any information on it. The reel has a "normal" reel foot stamped 80 and not the typical "wavy" foot that I see on most all Hendryx reels. The two pillars that the reel seat is attached to are thick in the middle and taper nicely on both ends and all the pillars have shoulders.
The reel has nicely knurled coin metal inner rims along with fancy machined hard rubber outer rims. If you unscrew the jeweled bearing cap the front of the reel comes right off.
On the inside is the stamp QUADRUPLE. Now here is where it gets a bit weird. Stamped inside the reel's face-plate are Hendryx's July 10, 1888 patent and his February 7, 1905 patent. There is also a January 1889 patent which I can't account for. The day in January is obscured by the gear housing but having checked Jim Brown's patent book I can't find a Hendryx patent in January of 1889. The only two reel patents listed in Jim's book issued in January of 1889 were issued to Joseph P. Costigan of St. Paul Minn and George W. Prouty of Boston Mass. I did a Google patent search and could not find an 1889 patent granted to Hendryx. Can anyone explain?
Moving on, another cool feature of this reel is if you loosen the four screws on the inside of the face-plate you can rotate the inside metal plate with the gear and handle post around so the handle can be at any position on the clock. Also, the hard rubber rear side-plate has two sliding click buttons, one activates a drag and the other a clicker.
A pretty cool reel.
Does anyone have any information on this one?
Thank you,
Ed