Super User BassinLou Posted November 18, 2014 Super User Posted November 18, 2014 How are the senko's held in place? Glue? Let us know how that bait works out. Quote
lordpaxin Posted November 18, 2014 Author Posted November 18, 2014 There is a plastic button / weight on the bottom, pulled that out and pushed senkos through, (paperclip) then siliconed the stubs togther inside the rear of the frog Quote
Weld's Largemouth Posted November 18, 2014 Posted November 18, 2014 What type of senko is that? Quote
lordpaxin Posted November 19, 2014 Author Posted November 19, 2014 its the small split tails, dont know the exact name Quote
Super User BassinLou Posted November 19, 2014 Super User Posted November 19, 2014 Oh.. so is that one worm? Or two halves? Quote
lordpaxin Posted November 19, 2014 Author Posted November 19, 2014 its the back 3/4 of 2. found it Yamamoto Kut Tail Worm4" i think Quote
Blues19 Posted November 19, 2014 Posted November 19, 2014 i have put silicone skirts in for replacements, but no worms. Thats an interesting idea. Would love to hear how it works Quote
Super User Master Bait'r Posted November 19, 2014 Super User Posted November 19, 2014 Ok... That right there is awesome. Cheers to you sir... That is happening on a few of mine for sure. I've done rabbit fur, feathers, fly tinsel and silicone but never a worm tail. The old kicker frogs had me thinking about grub tails but I really like this idea. Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted November 19, 2014 Global Moderator Posted November 19, 2014 Might consider trying to do that with Zman finesse worms next time I need to replace the legs of a frog. Super durable, super soft=lots of movement, plus they float. 1 Quote
Super User Catch and Grease Posted November 19, 2014 Super User Posted November 19, 2014 Might consider trying to do that with Zman finesse worms next time I need to replace the legs of a frog. Super durable, super soft=lots of movement, plus they float. I was thinking the same thing, mainly because they are durable and float! Quote
lordpaxin Posted November 19, 2014 Author Posted November 19, 2014 Hmmm I didn't think about floating This frog may stand right up on his legs lol 1 Quote
Super User Ratherbfishing Posted November 19, 2014 Super User Posted November 19, 2014 I think you'll find the legs will try to stick to everything they come in contact with. Hope not. Quote
MO_LMB Posted November 19, 2014 Posted November 19, 2014 You could lube them up with megastrike to help them glide through the weeds. Quote
Fisher-O-men Posted November 19, 2014 Posted November 19, 2014 There is a fella out here that puts a worm straight out the back of his spro. Calls it a "sprouse". He kills it! I think Mend-it might work better than silicone. Quote
Jaderose Posted November 19, 2014 Posted November 19, 2014 Me likey..I got a couple of old frogs that will see this mod. THANKS!! 1 Quote
Super User CWB Posted November 20, 2014 Super User Posted November 20, 2014 Might consider trying to do that with Zman finesse worms next time I need to replace the legs of a frog. Super durable, super soft=lots of movement, plus they float. Would the Elaztec material melt the frogs body? if not, pretty good idea. Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted November 23, 2014 Global Moderator Posted November 23, 2014 Would the Elaztec material melt the frogs body? if not, pretty good idea. No idea, but I think I'm going to buy a H2O frog and cut the legs off just so I can try it out. Guess I could just lay a finesse worm across the back of the one I already have and if it melts then I can just buy a new one to replace that one. 1 Quote
Super User Sam Posted November 23, 2014 Super User Posted November 23, 2014 Great idea. Thinking out of the box is what bass fishing is all about. Good job. Quote
Super User Master Bait'r Posted November 23, 2014 Super User Posted November 23, 2014 There is a fella out here that puts a worm straight out the back of his spro. Calls it a "sprouse". He kills it! I think Mend-it might work better than silicone. If it's centered I don't doubt that for a second. I love centered tail frogs like the Slither K- that center point tail seems to pivot the best IMO. A worm tail would make it like a soft, floating CL8 Mighty Mouse and that would fkn SLAY. I've actually got one that's nearing the end of it's tail life now- my shooting star colored one. I can see now that I should probably glue in a screw guide instead of another tail plug and try on a few different profiles and colors and keep notes. I already know I want to stick an Uptons Aaron's Trajic dragon tail on there and see what happens Quote
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