Taylor Haberle Posted May 7, 2016 Posted May 7, 2016 I've been fishing mini jigs like the Strike King Bitsy Flip for river smallies forever and always have a tube tied on. Just hit me; has anyone ever used a tube as a jig trailer? The tubes I have are 3.5" and on the mini jigs, the body extends almost an inch past the skirt. Do they work better if the tube appendages are relatively even with the skirt? thanks, Quote
Super User Senko lover Posted May 8, 2016 Super User Posted May 8, 2016 I put one on the other day just for the heck of it and didn't like it personally lol. 1 Quote
Heron Posted May 8, 2016 Posted May 8, 2016 I've caught fish on it before, but was a swim jig. Try a tube as a chatterbait trailer Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted May 8, 2016 Global Moderator Posted May 8, 2016 5 hours ago, Senko lover said: I put one on the other day just for the heck of it and didn't like it personally lol. I did the same. It made sense in my head, but apparently not to the fish. 2 Quote
Super User Fishes in trees Posted May 8, 2016 Super User Posted May 8, 2016 Maybe it is just me, but given that I don't have unlimited fishing time, if I feel like I need a jig trailer I think that there are better options out there than a tube. But really who knows. Fish it for a while and find out for yourself. Back in the day, a tube was considered strictly a finesse bait. Then Denny Brauer won a Classic pitching a tube. All of a sudden a tube is a heavy cover pitching bait. That is mostly how I use a tube. Quote
Super User smalljaw67 Posted May 8, 2016 Super User Posted May 8, 2016 What makes a tube so deadly is the fall, and the profile, alter both of these things at once and it becomes less effective. While it will probably catch a few fish just as a skirted bass jig will without a trailer, I find there are better trailers to maximize the presentation. I also find that a tube is deadly enough all by itself and there are enough ways to rig it that you don't need to use it as a trailer. The same thing for the bitsy flip, I make my own jigs but I make one similar for river smallmouth, I use it in place of a tube when the water is high and the bass move up on the bank in flooded water willow, I make short pitches and a few quick hops like a craw scooting along and it works but I use a small chunk trailer because it offers a better profile than a tube would. 1 Quote
BassThumb Posted May 8, 2016 Posted May 8, 2016 I've tried it and caught a few fish with it. Problem was that the tube is so flimsy that it barely stayed in place when unglued, and it tore easily when glued. 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted May 8, 2016 Super User Posted May 8, 2016 The first bass size tube was the Bobby Garlands Gitzit and it was fished with a plain jig. Some anglers put a curl tail grub inside the Gitzit ( cap & gown) and used the combination with a skirted jig & trailer back in the early 80's. Tom Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted May 9, 2016 Super User Posted May 9, 2016 An internal jig head allows the tube to circle on the fall. When the fish are active this motion can be killer. However, for the most part a Gitzit was designed as a "do nothing" lure: cast it out, light a smoke and pop-a-top. So, using a tube for a jig trailer is not going to produce the "action" you are probably looking for. 1 Quote
Super User Paul Roberts Posted May 9, 2016 Super User Posted May 9, 2016 On 5/8/2016 at 5:10 AM, smalljaw67 said: What makes a tube so deadly is the fall, and the profile, alter both of these things at once and it becomes less effective. Ditto. And what RW said. I've tried a tube as a trailer, just to alter fall rate and add bulk. But it didn't add much to either presentation type. Tubes fish best when they glide and corkscrew on the fall. For skirted jigs I like a trailer that has some action. Quote
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