Hi Vinny,
I'm late to this post-been out fishing for tarpon and snook! But I've read most of them, and I would echo lots of the other posts: I, and my sons, have 10 and 11 weights in either NRX, NRX Plus, Scott Meridian, and one 11 weight Loomis Asquith. I love, and can easily throw, all of them. The Asquith stands out-light, but powerful and accurate. I DID go throw the Scott Sector recently, and that mimics the NRX Plus, and approaches the Asquith! Very nice rod. If I didn't already have nice toys, I'd buy one. Key items: 1) The fly line that you put on it, and 2) don't know if all of the rods are available in 1 piece; many manufacturers only offer 4, 3, or 2 piece these days. Something else to help you spend more money: Get a second, or even third, spool. Keep a "head heavy" floating line as your main line (SA Amplitude Grand Slam, RIO Direct Core Flats Pro, Chard Tropical Punch), then have a second spool with more of a "presentation" line, for low wind/calm conditions (RIO Technical Tarpon, etc.), or even a "ghost tip" line, i.e., floating but with a clear sink tip. Then have the third spool with an intermediate sink line. I still love my original NRX rods, but these new rods ARE lighter. BTW, even though I try to get them to the boat and release them fast, I was throwing at smaller tarpon with a 10 weight NRX Plus, but ended up hooking a 130 on a 10 weight-NOT RECOMMENDED-and she gave me 12 jumps and tired herself out. She was to the boat in 15 minutes... If they run and you chase them, you can beat them down fast once you are on the fat part of your fly line...