I want to become a crankbait guru!!!! But the things are still somewhat of a mystery to me. My strong points are buzzbaits and softplastics (any), following that would be spinnerbaits, traditional topwaters (jitterbugs, spooks, etc) and last would be crankbaits with the exception of Rattl Traps, spinnerbaits and rattl traps would probably be tied.
Anyway I want to master the crankbait, typically when I set out to learn something I research everything I can find on the subject, dissect it and review it again and again. I've read and re-read every crankbait article on this site, if you read them you may end up as confused as a breast fed baby in a topless bar! The retrieval rates recommended by the experts were varied and got me to thinking. Orginially crankbaits were designed to be trolled, especially deep divers. That is when the lightbulb went off in my head, if the original design of the bait was trolling then trolling speeds come into play to get the right action, depth etc. How do we as bass fishermen figure out how to reel a crankbait at the right speed when the literature on the use of cranks deal with trolling them? Simple math, 1 mph trolling speed equates to 17.6" per second, 1.5 mph relates to 26.4" per second, and 2 mph equals 35.2" second. Now all I have to do is figure out how long a turn of the handle takes on my reels. It is easy to know when you are working them too fast, especially deep divers, when they quit pulling as hard you know that the water is bypassing the lip and not the bait is no longer diving properly. But how about too slow? A 20 inch bass is capable of bursts of speed of upwards of 12mph, I used to think that a burner reel moved the bait so quickly that the bass couldn't catch it, now I know that the top speed we can get out of a burner is less than 5mph!!!! Now I have to figure out what IPT of reel I should be using. What I've come up with is that the smaller shallow running cranks, I need to be around 24IPT, and adjust accordingly. Where I'm stumped is the deep divers, I don't care what anyone says, cranking a DD22 all day will cramp your wrist and hurt. So although a little more speed may be nice on these baits, it will come at a higher price in my comfort. Obviously anything slower than 20IPT results in a bait that is barely moving at all, from the bass' point of view. I'm thinking something around 22 IPT. Any thoughts?