KastKing AMTE-KRDCSTRAD-70MH2-US-FBA Check price on Amazon

KastKing AMTE-KRDCSTRAD-70MH2-US-FBA Fishing Rod Review

4.7 (293) Amazon rating$49.99100+ bought last month

Our verdict

At $49.99, the KastKing AMTE-KRDCSTRAD-70MH2 backs up its 4.7-star average across 293 reviews with a graphite blank, 17-pound line rating, and a spare tip most rods in this price bracket skip entirely.

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Best for

Casting anglers who want a medium heavy graphite rod around 7 feet for general freshwater work, and who like having a backup tip included in case the original snaps on a hookset or car door.

Skip if

Skip this if you need a dedicated trolling setup, target line-shy species requiring lighter line under 17 pounds, or specifically want a one-piece blank instead of the two-piece plus spare tip configuration.

  • Material Graphite
  • Line Weight 17 pounds
  • Target Species Fish
  • Technique Casting
  • Size 7'- MH -Fast (2pcs+ Extra Tip)
  • Color Red

Our scorecard

4.6/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.7/5

    4.7 average across 293 owner ratings

  • Popularity3.3/5

    293 owner reviews, more than most models here

The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.

Overview

A 7-foot medium heavy casting rod built around a graphite blank, the KastKing AMTE-KRDCSTRAD-70MH2 sits at $49.99, a price that lands between the budget Zebco ZCASTC56TEL at $19.99 and the pricier Ahi RSB-800 at $89.99. It rates a 17-pound line weight, which puts it in casting territory for bass and similar freshwater fish rather than light finesse work.

The two-piece construction plus an extra tip section is the standout detail here. Most rods in this price range ship as a single spare-free unit, so a broken tip usually means buying a whole new rod. KastKing includes a replacement, which changes the math on long-term cost even if the base rod never gets discounted.

Review volume tells its own story. At 293 reviews and a 4.7-star average, this rod has more total feedback than the Okuma CP-LT-762M (111 reviews, 4.4 stars) and a higher average than the Zebco (299 reviews, 4.4 stars) despite similar review counts. Bought last month sits at 100+, respectable but below the Zebco's 200+ pace, suggesting steady rather than explosive demand.

Pros

  • 4.7-star average across 293 reviews, the highest rating of any rod in this comparison set
  • Graphite blank keeps the rod lighter than the Okuma's stainless steel build
  • 17-pound line rating suits medium heavy casting applications for bass and similar species
  • Two-piece design with an included extra tip section, a rare inclusion at this $49.99 price point
  • Priced under the Ahi RSB-800's $89.99 while matching its medium heavy classification
  • 100+ bought last month shows consistent ongoing demand

Cons

  • No listed target species beyond a generic "Fish" designation, unlike the Okuma's named walleye, trout, bass, and pike targeting
  • 17-pound line weight is fixed, offering less flexibility than rods listing a range like the Ahi's 2-10 lb spread
  • Bought last month (100+) trails the Zebco ZCASTC56TEL's 200+ pace
  • Red colorway limits appeal for anglers who prefer black or neutral rod finishes

Specifications

MaterialGraphite
Line Weight17 pounds
Target SpeciesFish
TechniqueCasting
Size7'- MH -Fast (2pcs+ Extra Tip)
ColorRed
Pieces2
FeatureMedium Heavy

Performance notes

A 7-foot medium heavy blank paired with a 17-pound line rating puts this rod squarely in general-purpose casting territory, stout enough for setting hooks on bass-class fish without the softness of an ultralight taper. The graphite build trades some durability against the Okuma's stainless steel elements for reduced swing weight, which typically means less fatigue on long days of repetitive casting. The two-piece breakdown makes the rod easier to transport than a one-piece blank, and the included spare tip section addresses the single most common failure point on any casting rod, a snapped tip from a hard hookset or a door slammed at the wrong moment. There's no listed handle length or reel seat material in the spec sheet, so buyers matching this to a specific reel size should confirm fit separately before purchase.

What buyers say

A 4.7-star average is the ceiling of this comparison group, edging out the Ahi RSB-800 and Zebco (both 4.4-4.5) despite the KastKing carrying fewer total reviews than either at 293. That combination, a top rating with a mid-sized review base, tends to indicate a product that satisfies the buyers it reaches rather than one relying on sheer volume to smooth over complaints. The 100+ bought-last-month figure is solid but not the fastest mover in the set, since the budget Zebco moves at 200+ per month at less than half the price. Read together, the pattern suggests a rod that earns loyalty among the anglers who choose it, even if raw sales volume favors cheaper alternatives.

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Frequently asked questions

What line weight does the KastKing AMTE-KRDCSTRAD-70MH2 handle?

It's rated for 17-pound line, which fits medium heavy casting work for bass and comparably sized freshwater species rather than light line finesse presentations.

Does this rod come with a spare part?

Yes. It ships as a two-piece rod plus an extra tip section, so a snapped tip doesn't automatically mean replacing the entire rod, a detail uncommon at this $49.99 price.

How does the price compare to similar casting rods?

At $49.99 it sits above the Zebco ZCASTC56TEL ($19.99) and Okuma CP-LT-762M ($43.69), but well below the Ahi RSB-800 ($89.99), placing it in the middle of this comparison set.

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