RHuff Posted March 7, 2018 Posted March 7, 2018 I saw Mark Zona talk about the Power Shot Technique for flipping heavy cover. I have never heard of this but golly gee I bet you it would be successful for catching big fish. I've always just Texas rigged a soft plastic and pegged the weight when flipping lilly pads and other cover. Anyone tried this? Quote
Super User J Francho Posted March 7, 2018 Super User Posted March 7, 2018 Yep. Works. https://www.bassresource.com/bass-fishing-videos/power-drop-shot.html 2 Quote
Super User Choporoz Posted March 7, 2018 Super User Posted March 7, 2018 Younger brother to Bubba Shot and their sister Heavy Shot 1 Quote
Super User J Francho Posted March 7, 2018 Super User Posted March 7, 2018 I got this tip from @ww2farmer , I think? thread a bullet sinker upside down on the tag line, and tie a split ring to the end. You can leave it like or use a rubber t-stop to adjust the drop lendth. Tha rig shoot straight through the slop. 3 1 Quote
RHuff Posted March 8, 2018 Author Posted March 8, 2018 How long of a leader to you guys use? Do you use a fluro leader for this? Or can you use braid for the whole rig. Also, is it harder to flip with the weight of the sinker at the bottom with the weight of the plastic a few inches above it? 1 Quote
Super User J Francho Posted March 8, 2018 Super User Posted March 8, 2018 Typically, I'm going for the bait to be almost at the surface, so I can shake it, and make a commotion, so about as long as it is deep. 1 Quote
RHuff Posted March 8, 2018 Author Posted March 8, 2018 If I'm flipping into a lilly pad field in 13 feet of water I can't have a 13 foot long leader though? There would be no way to flip that. Do you only use this rig in extreme shallow water, say 3 feet or less? Zona looked like his leader was only like 6 or 8 inches long. Quote
Super User J Francho Posted March 8, 2018 Super User Posted March 8, 2018 Most of the pads up here are in 3' or less. I'm describing just one particular application. There's other ways for other waters. As far as deeper, the fish will tell you. I usually go from 12 to 30". Quote
Super User Choporoz Posted March 8, 2018 Super User Posted March 8, 2018 I'm no lily pad expert, but I don't think I've ever encountered them in water more than about 4' deep. 2 Quote
RHuff Posted March 8, 2018 Author Posted March 8, 2018 I have them on my home lake in 8-10 feet, up to 13-15 on the edges of the field. 90% of my lake (220 acres) is surrounded by lilly pads on the perimeter. 1 Quote
Super User Montanaro Posted March 9, 2018 Super User Posted March 9, 2018 I have never found a use for it. If im flipping pads they are usually thick enough to allow me to hold the bait at the depth i want...which most of the time is on bottom or right under the mat. Quote
FishDewd Posted March 10, 2018 Posted March 10, 2018 I'm not familiar with the power shot being for flipping in heavy cover, but don't see why not? I've used that to catch bass a few times in weedy areas, although I rigged mine with a spinshot hook with a lighter sacrifice leader. Just made a stopper knot to cinch the dropshot weight onto, kept the weight leader at about 7" long and jiggled it now and then along the bottom. Quote
Super User FryDog62 Posted May 7, 2018 Super User Posted May 7, 2018 On 3/7/2018 at 12:28 PM, RHuff said: I saw Mark Zona talk about the Power Shot Technique for flipping heavy cover. I have never heard of this but golly gee I bet you it would be successful for catching big fish. I've always just Texas rigged a soft plastic and pegged the weight when flipping lilly pads and other cover. Anyone tried this? I saw him do this too, but didn’t see him say length/power of the rod for this. Would think it would need to be fairly long to sat vertical, light and a sensitive tip to detect bites. Thoughts anyone..? Quote
Super User J Francho Posted May 7, 2018 Super User Posted May 7, 2018 Any heavy jig rod will do. No need to set vertically - works the same as any weedless worm hook. Quote
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