Absolutely — if you’re talking lure weight in grams and want a rod that covers the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s, you’re looking for a pretty versatile medium-heavy to heavy lure rod. 🎣
A solid pick from the options provided is the Agitator LR-C 7ft 6in/229cm 20-60gr Lure Fishing Rod. That said, it tops out at 60g, so it’s best if you’re mostly fishing the 50s and low 60s. It’s a nice all-rounder for soft plastics, crankbaits, spinners, spoons, and light jerkbaits.
If you truly want to fish the 70s and 80s, I’d size up to one of these heavier rods:
- Agitator LR-S Compact 6ft/183cm 130-200gr Lure Fishing Rod — a stronger choice if you need a rod that can handle heavier casting or vertical work. It’s more than enough for 70g and 80g lures, though it’s a bigger stick than many freshwater anglers need.
- If you’re doing vertical jigging or heavy saltwater work, the REVOLUTION AHI JYG ROD is built for much heavier loads than that, so it’s overkill for 50–80g unless you’re fishing rough water or very strong fish.
My quick recommendation
- 50–60g: Agitator LR-C
- 70–80g: Agitator LR-S Compact
- If you want one rod to cover all four weights comfortably: look for a rod rated around 20–80g or 30–90g if you can find one. That gives you a safer casting range without overloading the blank.
A few setup tips
- Pair the rod with a reel that has a smooth drag and enough line capacity.
- Use braid for casting distance and sensitivity, then add a leader matched to the species.
- Don’t push a rod past its rating too often — that’s how expensive mistakes and sad, floppy rod tips happen 😅
If you want, I can also recommend the best rod by species — bass, pike, saltwater, or jigging — and narrow it down to a perfect match. Keep me honest and keep your rod loaded!











