Hi Alan,
Firstly, I'd like to say what a great help your website has been, whenever I'm servicing a reel or deciding what reel to buy (or not buy). Unfortunately, you don't like spinning reels, but you can't have everything, I suppose.
I also think that websites like yours, and people like yourself, are at least partly responsible for the big name brands finally starting to adopt carbon fibre drag washers as stock in their mid to high range conventional and spinning reels. So, thanks for that.
Those topless aluminium frames for the Charter Special look really good. Although the level wind on my reel never seized, it was always very wobbly, and I'm not sure if I just got a bad one. I used to like the level wind feature, but now I'd rather not have one on a reel that size.
Personally, I like using the smallest possible reel with the highest possible drag capability and the thinnest possible braid for the drag setting I'm using. I like the idea of using small reels and light rods for big fish, and the feeling of being under-gunned, with the knowledge that I'm not really under-gunned at all. Most importantly, I like using gear that is physically light enough that catching smaller fish on it is still enjoyable, but which has enough guts to defeat the big fish.
Yellowtail (I know you call a kind of mackerel a "kingfish" in the US) are the only fish that have consistently cut me off on the bottom on drag settings lower than 20lb, when fishing here over particularly "reefy" areas off the Gold Coast, and so when I fish for them I ideally want a reel that can exceed 20lb's of drag. 30lb's (13kg) of drag is even better, but I don't think I could easily handle much more than that.
I hope you get a chance to post a tutorial on the Talica or Talica II some time, or the new Saltiga 2-speed and single speed, but I suppose you only see the reels you're sent and those you buy yourself.
Sorry to everyone else if I got a bit off topic.
Cheers,
Brent.