So I bought this rod from my friendly little local fly shop a little more than a month ago. Here's why...
When I first started fishing the salt, I went with a slightly-over-medium action Echo 6wt that Jon Stanbery had sort of customized for me (I knew I'd be comfortable learning the salt by throwing a 6wt as long as it was a slower action rod - just to get used to things). I liked it so much I bought another one, and again sent the new one off to Jon for some similar work.
What happened was I started getting into bigger fish - and bigger "doubles" of bigger fish due to a mass of time spent on the water, a greater knowledge of the sport, an increased comfort zone and good equipment at hand. And all those massive tugs I was getting - and losing - also helped seal the new rod deal for me. And truth be told, that legal Halibut that I took at Spanish Landing a while back was the one that sent me over the edge. Even though I had it hauled in after several rough minutes of yanking and dragging, the medium/fast Echo 6wt "Stanbery Special" I was waving around was simply too little for that fish, and I knew it. I remember the rod being nearly doubled-over and ya, I admit I was thinking it was going to fold and snap. Hence, the faster - much faster - 7wt.
I really like the Vice rod. It sports a smaller/thinner full wells grip for starters. I hate the full wells grips found on most all rods, but this one works beautifully for me - I love that aspect of it. A rods' actual visual (color) appearance has never mattered to me. This one's a metallic Irish green blank - looks kind of like a color that you'd paint a Hot Wheels car, but definitely not something a traditional fly rod blank should look like. I dont care though. It threw line in the parking lot pretty good, so I took it. When I got home, I mated it with a brand new Redington Rise 7/8 reel and SA Textured Streamer Express Sink Tip line. A great combo that didn't rape my budget... too bad.
And ya, it throws line pretty fast. My only real problem throwing a fast rod is, I need to remember to allow the line to take some water on the backcast while loading, and allow my hand/wrist to feel the power it brings at the back end. Once the line gathers some moisture and comes forward, its flying. I never dreamed I'd be launching line from a float tube of all places. But it works - not that I actually ever need to "throw" any line, mind you. The only time I've actually needed to throw line were the times when a bait ball would bust close by. And then, the rod threw line right on top of where the bait ball was.
So my limited salt sense says, the Vice rod is pretty cool - for me anyways. 200 clams. Well worth it, physically and mentally. I take it when I'm fishing any place that has proven to be hazardous to my little 6wts. I used it last week with Richard at Tidelands. Glad I had it as that Yellowfin took some decent line and pulled like a small truck. Definitely happy to have a little more backbone in my hands.