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earthworm77

BassResource.com Writer
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Everything posted by earthworm77

  1. I agree with you on the Devcon, it works great and brushing a few baits at a time isn't a big deal.
  2. I'd go with a Shimano Stradic CI4. Or something JDM like the Cardiff/Soare etc.
  3. RP40. It is a 2 part alumilite type casting material.
  4. I got an email from a buddy who asked if I could make a UL version of a spinbait for trout fishing in the mountain streams of North Carolina. It seems that Duo Realis discontinued the spinbait 60 and now only makes an 80 and 90mm version. I couldn't even find a 60 but I remembered that I had one. I am a jig and spinnerbait guy, I've never made a hard bodied bait before. I took on the challenge because I felt if I was successful, I'd have a hell of a bluegill/bass bait for my own pond on my property in NC and the rivers I fish here in Florida. How I went about it: I'm not ashamed to admit I made a 1pc mold of the 60 and cut it down to the length I wanted and sanded it to the necessary profile I was looking for. I made both a 1 5/8" and a 2" body. But with that came the issue of properly weighting it so that it would fall flat horizontally with that sexy little shimmy. I needed to add weight to a solid body, not a bait I could assemble from two halves with spots for the weights molded in place. I molded about a dozen bodies and then had to experiment with weighting the baits. I needed the bait to do two things........swim straight without wobble and fall perfectly horizontal with that sexy shimy like a Senko. I drilled a series of small holes ahead of and behind the belly hook and filled them with tungsten powder. I got really lucky and pretty much nailed it with the first two baits I made. Next I mocked up a bait with the screws and hardware I would use to complete the bait to test it. I swam some of the baits in the pool and found that they blew out and rolled if fished too fast. I simply bent the paddles of the lead prop the opposite of the tail prop and this was instantly corrected. The bait fell exactly as I wanted it to and it swam great. I would decide to use Decoy single hook's on the 1 5/8" bait and Gammy trebles on the 2". At about the time I was knee deep in the project, I read on Tackle Tour that Duo made the Tetra Works mini prop which is a ul version of the Spinbait. Despite the bait being rather difficult to acquire, I managed to get one and here is a comparison photo with the 1 5/8" bait I made. Here a few smaller ones @ 1/8oz ready for clear coat. 2" baits are about 3/16oz. I was going for small in the sense of length and profile. A slightly heavier bait in moving water or deeper water like the quarry pits I fish could be a good thing. These are essentially the finished baits in both 2" and 1 5/8". A couple were also specifically made for deep water. Here is a family tree of the 90mm,80mm, 60mm and 48mm baits from Duo and a couple of mine. [/quote]
  5. I'm a Slider guy Allen, I dig that.
  6. If you've ever had a Zman TRD on your jig for a long time you will notice that it becomes rather spongy and flexible and floats like no other plastic. I'd like the Ned Robo for a drop shot because of the colors. But I'll stick with the Zman forNed rigging, of which I've already caught thousands of bass on despite my previous aversion to elaztech plastic.
  7. Orange lake and Loochloosa are right there.......when Orange is on.......it can be the best lake in the state.
  8. I live in Fl but have 20 acres in Granville NC. The guy who looks after my property lends me his creek boat for my private 1 acre pond. I use it for bass fishing. For small waters like mine, it is perfect. It paddles fine and could handle a 12 volt troller........my only concern for you is its stability on larger water. I'm not sure it is the best option. I think it would be very easy to get off balance especially shooting and take a dunk in it.
  9. It certainly would skew the 10% thing.
  10. The problem is that most guys who fish THINK they are one of the skilled guys and usually they aren't. It is an ego thing.
  11. They are on top, stick to the theme of top water baits or stuff that sinks really slowly like unweighted soft plastics.
  12. Hooksets are free, when in doubt, set the hook.
  13. OSP Dolive Craw and Yamamoto Fat Baby for me.
  14. I manually close the bail not because of damage to the reel by not doing so, but because manually closing the reel prevents any chance of a pool of line getting loops on the spool and causing line twist or tangles later on.
  15. I am a former LEO from the NYPD. I carried a Smith 5946 which is a relatively large framed 9mm. My back up was Kahr K-9. I hated the Kahr just as I hated the LCP and Body guard .380's. They suck to shoot with. And I believe if you are going to carry, you should be proficient with what you carry. That said, once I shot about 20rds out of each weapon, they were extremely uncomfortable to shoot. I now carry a Glock 43(w/+2 mag) 9mm. It is small enough to fit in my pocket of my shorts down here in Fl. during the hottest months and it is pretty comfortable to shoot. The extra capacity doesn't hurt either. I am looking into the G30S because I prefer .45ACP. When I retired, I found myself buying Glocks and getting rid of any other make of pistol that I owned.
  16. Not sure what type of water you are fishing, but I'd likely drop to 8lb line. I'm in Fl. and can't see needing 10lb on a spinning outfit for bass fishing. It wouldn't do anything for me that I couldn't do with braid and casting gear. I am a light tackle guy, I'd likely opt for 6lb as I currently do. I also think as you increase lb test you increase diameter and line memory. I would opt for Seaguar invizx it is extremely limp and manageable. I don't care for straight mono. Anything McCoy is pretty good. I liked regular Silver Thread back in the day, I haven't used the AN40. But, I like its diameter and if the breaking strength isn't sacrificed, I might give it a shot over the McCoy. I use McCoy clear often.
  17. If you are using the 70 as your bar, you likely won't find much that is cheaper and better. The E and I series Curados are excellent. The I's can be had for about 110.00 if you look around. Better is in the eye of the beholder, in my opinion nothing beat the E's unless it is one of my Aldabarans and they cost 2.5X as much.
  18. I think the issue is with the longevity of the cardboard tubes. I don't expect a brand new tube to break but once if I re use it and the guy(hypothetically, I use PVC) I sell a rod to re uses it........and down the road, maybe as some point it degrades? Get's knocked around one too many times.....dented....etc..... I also tape the rod handle to the side of the tube so if a cap comes off, the rod stays in the tube and can't move around.
  19. I buy and sell a ton of rods, I've had rods in cardboard tubes arrive broken, I've never had an issue with PVC. If I sell a rod, it get shipping in PVC and packaged correctly. Sure they can break pvc but I think it happens a lot less frequently.
  20. A 3700 box is pretty big fellas, fill it up!!! For pond fishing: 1x 3/8oz chatterbait(white -ish or Ayu) 1x Sammy 85(wagasaki) 1x Pop X(ayu) 2x Lucky Craft LV100's (Ayu, some kind of red craw) 2x 2" squarebills(chart blk back, bluegill) 4x 3/8oz Grass jigs(black, GP) 2x 3/8oz swim jig(Shad) 1x 5" KVD baby Finesse Worm(Magic) 1X 1/4oz Spinnerbait(chart white) 1X 1/4oz Buzzbait(blk/red) 1x 2" hollow body frog(frog or white belly) 1x 2.5" swim shad baits like Sassy Shads(shad) 2x bag of 4" senkos(Grn Pumpkin/Wat. lam and watermelon red flk) 1x bag of 5" Fluke (pearl or bubble gum) 1x bag Gambler Cane toad 1x bag of assorted tungsten weights 20x 1/0 Gammie split shot dropshot hooks wacky riggerizer tool and o rings 10x 3/0 ewg hooks
  21. Craft fur is the most commonly used material, but mallard or duck feathers have become pretty popular too.
  22. That is one type of jig I only tie with craft hair.
  23. Apparently he got more than a slap on the wrist!!!! Am I right? Sorry, couldn't resist.
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