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Best Gear for Fishing Below Dams (2026)

Six years ago I lost my best catfish setup of the season to a snag in 12 feet of fast water below Murray Lock. Wasn't the rod's fault — it was the wrong sinker for the current that day. That's tailrace fishing in a nutshell: the gear that works on a flat lake will get destroyed below a dam. Here's what actually holds up when the water is pushing through the turbines.

By Tony · Last updated May 7, 2026

Top Picks at a Glance

Best Overall Rod

Ugly Stik Ugly Stik Tiger Elite

My do-everything rod for the tailrace.

$50-$80 · 4.7/5
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Best Premium Rod

Whisker Seeker Tackle Whisker Seeker Tackle Cataclysm

The serious catfish rod for serious anglers.

$170-$220 · 4.8/5
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Best Budget Rod

Ugly Stik Ugly Stik Catfish Special

If you're just getting into catfishing or you fish the dam four or five times a year, this is plenty.

$35-$55 · 4.5/5
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Compare All Picks

Pick Position Price Rating Buy
Ugly Stik Ugly Stik Tiger Elite Best Overall Rod $50-$80 4.7/5 Check
Whisker Seeker Tackle Whisker Seeker Tackle Cataclysm Best Premium Rod $170-$220 4.8/5 Check
Ugly Stik Ugly Stik Catfish Special Best Budget Rod $35-$55 4.5/5 Check
Penn Penn Battle III 6000 Best Spinning Reel $130-$170 4.8/5 Check
Abu Garcia Abu Garcia Ambassadeur 7000i C3 Best Baitcaster $180-$220 4.9/5 Check
Bullet Weights Bullet Weights No-Roll Sinkers (3-6 oz) Best Sinkers $8-$15 (10-pack) 4.6/5 Check
Whisker Seeker Tackle Whisker Seeker Tournament Circle Hooks (8/0) Best Circle Hooks $10-$14 (25-pack) 4.9/5 Check
Power Pro Power Pro Maxcuatro 65 lb Braid Best Line $30-$45 (300 yd) 4.8/5 Check
Garmin Garmin Striker Vivid 7sv Best Fish Finder $450-$550 4.7/5 Check
Best Overall Rod

Ugly Stik Ugly Stik Tiger Elite

$50-$80 · 4.7/5

My do-everything rod for the tailrace. The Tiger Elite has the backbone to stop a 40-pound blue cat in current and the forgiveness to land white bass on the same trip without ripping the hook. Clear tip section is the magic — you see the bite before you feel it, which matters when the current loads the rod constantly. I have three of these and they outlast every "premium" rod I've owned.

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Pros

  • Genuinely versatile across species
  • Survives boat slams + rip rap abuse
  • Clear tip telegraphs subtle bites

Cons

  • Heavy in the hand on long sessions
  • Cork-tape grip wears over time

Specs

length 7'6"
power Medium-Heavy / Heavy
action Moderate-Fast
pieces 1
Best Premium Rod

Whisker Seeker Tackle Whisker Seeker Tackle Cataclysm

$170-$220 · 4.8/5

The serious catfish rod for serious anglers. Built specifically for big blues and flatheads, the Cataclysm has a backbone you can rest a sinker on and a sensitive tip that telegraphs even a curious tap. Fuji guides, custom reel seat. If you're fishing tournaments or chasing trophy fish out of strong current, this is the upgrade that matters.

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Pros

  • Backbone for true trophy fish
  • High-quality Fuji components
  • Sensitive tip for current detection

Cons

  • Steep price tag
  • Overkill for casual angling

Specs

length 7'6" / 8'
power Heavy
action Fast
pieces 1
Best Budget Rod

Ugly Stik Ugly Stik Catfish Special

$35-$55 · 4.5/5

If you're just getting into catfishing or you fish the dam four or five times a year, this is plenty. Same Ugly Stik durability story, just plainer components. I started with one of these on the Arkansas River and it landed every fish I hooked for two years before I "upgraded." Honestly, it never broke and I still keep it as a loaner rod for guests.

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Pros

  • Cheap and indestructible
  • Two-piece option for travel
  • Includes EVA grip on most models

Cons

  • Less sensitive than the Tiger Elite
  • Generic guides eventually corrode in saltwater (irrelevant for tailrace)

Specs

length 7'
power Medium-Heavy
action Moderate
pieces 1-2
Best Spinning Reel

Penn Penn Battle III 6000

$130-$170 · 4.8/5

Originally built for saltwater inshore work, the Battle III is the reel I trust against tailrace catfish and stripers. 35-pound carbon-fiber drag matters when a fish hits the current and decides to head downstream. Sealed body laughs at sand and silt. Have not had one fail in three years of hard use.

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Pros

  • 35 lb drag handles trophy fish in current
  • Sealed body — silt-proof
  • Dead-smooth retrieve out of the box

Cons

  • Heavier than freshwater-only reels
  • Bail trip can feel stiff at first

Specs

gear Ratio 5.6:1
max Drag 35 lb
line Capacity 290 yd / 30 lb braid
weight 21.4 oz
Best Baitcaster

Abu Garcia Abu Garcia Ambassadeur 7000i C3

$180-$220 · 4.9/5

The classic catfish round reel and still my pick for serious blue cat work. Massive line capacity, bulletproof build, slow gear ratio for fighting power. I have one from 2014 that I've never serviced beyond cleaning and it works exactly the same. The 7000i is the right size for the Arkansas River system.

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Pros

  • Iconic durability
  • Huge line capacity
  • Strong drag for big fish in current

Cons

  • Heavier than modern lowprofile reels
  • Slow retrieve — by design, but takes adjustment

Specs

gear Ratio 4.1:1
max Drag 20 lb
line Capacity 320 yd / 25 lb mono
weight 19.2 oz
Best Sinkers

Bullet Weights Bullet Weights No-Roll Sinkers (3-6 oz)

$8-$15 (10-pack) · 4.6/5

These are non-negotiable for tailrace fishing. Round sinkers roll downstream the second you set them; no-roll sinkers stay put. I run 4-oz on most days and step up to 6-oz when the gates open. Get the assortment pack first time and you'll figure out what your river needs.

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Pros

  • Stay anchored in current
  • Cheap to lose to snags (and you will lose them)
  • Multiple sizes for different flow

Cons

  • Lead — handle accordingly
  • Hooks on rocks more than rounds

Specs

weights 3 oz / 4 oz / 5 oz / 6 oz
shape Flat oblong
use Slip rig, three-way
Best Circle Hooks

Whisker Seeker Tackle Whisker Seeker Tournament Circle Hooks (8/0)

$10-$14 (25-pack) · 4.9/5

Sharp out of the package, hold up to repeated catfish jaws, and the offset is set right for sticking the corner of the mouth on a circle-hook rig. Used for two seasons in our tournament rotation, no straightened hooks. The 8/0 is the workhorse size for blues 5-30 lb; step up to 10/0 if you're targeting 40+.

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Pros

  • Sharp out of the package
  • Heavy wire stays straight
  • Designed for catfish specifically

Cons

  • More expensive than generic Eagle Claws
  • Limited retail availability — order direct

Specs

size 6/0, 8/0, 10/0
wire Heavy gauge
shape Octopus circle
Best Line

Power Pro Power Pro Maxcuatro 65 lb Braid

$30-$45 (300 yd) · 4.8/5

Maxcuatro's 4-end braid construction gives you a rounder, more abrasion-resistant line than standard 8-end at the same diameter. Tailrace bottoms are rip rap and oyster-shell rough; this stuff takes the beating. Pair with a 30-40 lb mono or fluoro leader for hook turnover.

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Pros

  • Round profile + abrasion resistance
  • Casts cleaner than 8-strand
  • Visible color helps current tracking

Cons

  • Pricier than basic braid
  • Knot strength sensitive to your leader knot — practice the FG

Specs

test 65 lb
diameter 0.014 in
construction 4-strand braid
color Moss Green
Best Fish Finder

Garmin Garmin Striker Vivid 7sv

$450-$550 · 4.7/5

Side-imaging is what changes the game on a tailrace — you can see the deep slots, the eddies behind structure, and where the catfish are stacked behind current breaks. The Vivid 7sv hits a sweet spot between price and capability. Don't need full chartplotting if you're mostly fishing one river system.

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Pros

  • Side-imaging at this price is a steal
  • Bright daylight-readable screen
  • Easy to mount and re-mount across boats

Cons

  • No preloaded maps
  • Touchscreen models are easier to operate, but cost a lot more

Specs

display 7" LCD, color
sonar CHIRP + ClearVu + SideVu
gps Built-in (no maps)
mount Tilt/swivel

How We Tested

Every rod, reel, and sinker on this list has been used personally on the Arkansas River system — Murray Lock & Dam, David D. Terry Lock & Dam, and Pool 7 tailraces — over multiple seasons. Specs were verified against manufacturer documentation. Where products were not personally tested (Whisker Seeker Cataclysm — tested by editorial reviewer, not the bylined author), we say so explicitly. Read our full methodology.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does sinker shape matter below a dam?

Tailrace current rolls round sinkers downstream within seconds, dragging your bait into snags. Flat or oblong "no-roll" sinkers anchor in place. This is the single biggest mistake new tailrace anglers make.

What pound test is right for tailrace catfish?

For blue cats and flatheads in heavy current, 65 lb braid main line with a 30-40 lb mono or fluorocarbon leader is the sweet spot. The braid handles abrasion against rip rap; the leader gives the bait natural movement and turns the hook on a circle-hook rig.

Spinning reel or baitcaster for catfishing?

Both work. Spinning reels (like the Penn Battle III 6000) are easier for casting heavy weights without a backlash and forgiving to learn on. Baitcasters (Abu Garcia 7000i) hold more line and let you free-spool a bait downstream, which serious blue cat anglers prefer. Most tailrace regulars run both.

Do I need side-imaging sonar?

Not strictly — but it accelerates your learning curve dramatically. Side-imaging shows you where catfish are stacking behind boulders, eddy lines, and depth changes you can't see from the surface. If you're fishing the same dam regularly, the Garmin Vivid 7sv pays for itself in three trips.

When is the best time to fish below a dam?

Generally the few hours after gates open or close — fish move with current changes. Early morning and late evening have the best low-light bite. Spring (white bass run) and fall (catfish feeding heavily) are the peak seasons on the Arkansas River system.