I live on Lake Norman and know Brian Huskins. He tests most of his baits out here since our water is so clear and our fish so finicky due to pressure and lack of natural cover. The guy is a mechanical engineer and a flat out perfection freak when it comes to building baits. His quality control is second to none.
The baits are great. They are all expensive but they are great and will last if you take care of them. I have 2 flat Bees which are what I call finesse crank baits. They run in the 6-8 ft range. I have them in the cricket finish (blueback and gizzard). They are fantastic, have an ultra tight wiggle and run true.
The little B is a great bait also but I'd rather throw a Thundershad 306 or a Spro Little John depending on if I want a rattle or not because they cast better all things being equal. Usually not here; again due to pressure.
The B 18 is his most popular bait bar none and is a true 18' running cb. It's legendary around the Catawba and Yadkin chains and gets talked about a lot due to the fact that it works. Action, it's a typical deep diver, it goes every which way, deflects nicely, and being balsa, has it's own rise rate but all of his baits are leaded so they rise properly and not too fast.
I also have 2 prop Bees which are incredible baits. Have them in #2 and #3 in bull bream and purple shad. They are as good of top water bait as there is which is why they are so highly regarded.
I also have the "Vee Bee" which he designed for KVD prior to he and Strike King doing the whole Strike King custom shop thing. That bait in the VS#8 (very sexy shad) caught me a load of fish this Winter and won me some money here on Norman. It's a bigger bodies flat sided crank bait that runs about 6-8' and it just gets hammered. That is my favorite of all of the baits he makes for sure. It's a big bite bait due to its size but it just gets crushed when it does get bit and I use it for finding kicker fish.
His dumptruck jigs are very good also and if you are goiing to use his stuff pay attention to how he says to rig them and what line to use. Izorline XXX co poly is terrific with balsa baits due to the lightness of the baits and the line behaves well with that. I'll throw the little bee on a spinning rod with 6 or 8lb test co poly if I'm not throwing a shad rap #5 on that same rig and the Spro little john or the Thundershad #306 on a casting rod usually with 8lb floro or co poly.
They are expensive but I am now a true believer and formally a balsa bait fan. You pay more for them but in clear water they always, always, always outperform hard baits due to the more subtle/tighter wiggle and not having a rattle which I've yet to find in hard baits. Having no rattle is key here on Lake Norman where the pressure is intense year round and the fish get their heads caved in by thousands of anglers a year beating the docks for them.
My reccomendation is to try a couple and see what you think. You can get them direct from his web site or call them. If you do tell him Chuck Daymude from LKN sent you. You can buy them retail at the Great Outdoors in Cherryville, NC also.
Other favorite balsa baits are the Rick Clunn designed Thundershad #306, #312, and #406 (hard to find but if you do....oh man!)
Also, Mimic has a nice balsa bait out that's in the $12 range which is low for that quality of bait. Look for mimic crank baits.
Here's a web site that can help with some others. On the line crank baits and WEC both make some nice ones too. Jeff Coble of the Bassmaster Weekend Series (legendary angler) is a WEC guy.
http://www.bubbajackstackle.com/
Good luck & have fun