Holliday- it is not hard to re-wrap a rod. You can get a whole set of Fuji guides on Fleabay for decent prices. Remember chrome guides? They sucked. I had tackle shops re-do some old favorite rods with Fuji guides but, man, they charged an arm and a leg. Few do it anymore. I decided to learn about this. My first efforts worked, but looked shitty. I got better at it.
Plenty of YouTube videos showing all the techniques.
If you are interested in going full hard core, they sell a rod winding machine. It is like a lathe, but holds a rod blank and rotates it slowly. You can then spool the wrapping thread on evenly and do a very pretty job. A great tackle shop by me, Merrick Tackle, used to sell all kinds of rod building stuff. Sadly, they moved and became mail order only. Still, they have all the best stuff though.
I wrap by hand. First I secure the guide with electric tape, then wrap one side. I turn the rod with one hand, while tensioning the thread with the other. It is slow but works. When you are happy with the thickness of thread, you take a small length of thread, make a loop, and lay it on the wrap. Wrap over it about twenty times, put the tag end through the loop, and pull on the loop, pulling the tag end under the wraps. Cut off the excess. That makes for a secure finish wrap.
You can coat the wrap with special finishes but they take a long time to soak in and dry. They make epoxy finish, but they are expensive and often are twin tubes that get mixed when you push some out. Leftover gets hard and is a waste. I prefer the Harbor Break five minute epoxy. Cheap- fast drying- strong. Just rotate the rod while it cures so it does not droop. It cures real fast so don't make mistakes.
I fix broken rods too. Fiberglass is easy, graphite somewhat harder. Graphite parts are expensive to find. Broken rods can donate parts. This rod is what I did over the weekend. I had the butt section of an old Browning BORON 2pc rod. I found a top section of an expensive Tsunami spinning rod on the docks. They were a very close fit, but needed a sleeve. I saved some sections of a Daiwa graphite rod from another project. I used a six inch graphite sleeve from that, and epoxied the two into a one piece rod. The guides were nice Fuji spinning. The one right near the break was in the way, so I cut it off. After the rod cured, I wrapped the guide back where it belonged. See pics. The last is the HF epoxy finish. It is now a 5.5 foot stiff, fast taper Boron/Graphite spinning rod. Perfect for the boat or around docks. Today I painted the rod, after a few coats, it will be part of the arsenal.