I haven't tried stowing them in a Revo but I do do it inside my Adventure, lighter 1 to 3 kg rods with a short but will fit through the center hatch with a bit of flexing and some pressure to the thicker part of the blank being necessary. They will slide easily in from the front hatch, heavier rods and rods with longer buts need to go in through the front hatch as the buts will not flex and the entry angle is to great for the space available (Very high risk of breakage) that's if it does fit through the center.
Another issue is the rods eyes catching on rudder/steering lines, tackle boxes other rods, etc inside the hull and bending them or damaging the control line's etc when trying to retrieve them. To overcome that I used two 40mm (about 2") pvc pipes, I used a heat gun and wine bottle to flare one end to assist easy entry and to stop the line chaffing on the edge of the pipe (ow I stowed mine reels on when going through the front hatch) and then slide them in first, one of my rods the bottom eye was to big so I heated one side of the PVC pipe for about 6" more than needed and then pushed a shovel handle down while applying upward pressure and stretching the pipe till it was wide enough.
They worked great until someone thought the were waste from another job

and cut them into garden steaks

. They were only good for one rod each unless the reels were taken off and all rods inserted together then I could squeeze 3 each depending on rods.
The biggest issue was getting them in/out when on the water, If I didn't have the AI I could straddle the hull and shimmy down (hard getting past my sounder) but it was very tippy, getting into the water with my dive fins on from the get go was the easiest way to deal with them, a pair of cheap/small fins help a lot with stability when straddling as well. Much easier to get your buddy if you are out with one, to get them in/out for you.