Lottabass Posted April 30, 2018 Posted April 30, 2018 What is the difference between a swim bait and a swim jig? Other than tackle companies wanting to sell you more stuff! Quote
Lottabass Posted April 30, 2018 Author Posted April 30, 2018 Thank you! I was referring to the difference from the fishes perspective. Quote
Super User Deleted account Posted April 30, 2018 Super User Posted April 30, 2018 The only thing they have in common is part of their name, kind of like a southern iced tea and a Long Island iced tea... 1 Quote
Super User Gundog Posted April 30, 2018 Super User Posted April 30, 2018 IMO swimbaits are more realistic looking with a bait fish profile. Swimjigs can resemble bait fish or crawfish or frogs or any food for bass. Having said that, swimjigs have caught me more fish in clear water lakes where you would think more realistic baits would work better. Fish want what fish want. No rhyme or reason. Quote
Beetlebz Posted April 30, 2018 Posted April 30, 2018 If I'm getting hit on the swimbait really well I go to a swim jig to try to upsize. If I'm throwing an underspin I upsize with a spinner bait. With that said, sometimes they will hit a swim jig and not a swimbait. *shrug* fish are weird. If I'm getting hit on a swim jig really good sometimes it helps to go to a big yamamoto heart tail on a 6/0 to upsize. I remember last summer at one pond where the bite is notoriously tough I couldn't get bit on anything except a huge yamamoto heart tail, but they were trashing the heart tail every cast. I went through a whole pack in 3 hours. It was nuts. Quote
RHuff Posted April 30, 2018 Posted April 30, 2018 Combine the two. Throw a swim jig with a paddle tail swimbait as a trailer. 4 Quote
Super User NHBull Posted April 30, 2018 Super User Posted April 30, 2018 It nessessarily an either , or , situation. ......additionally, a swim bait can be 3” - 12”+. 2 Quote
papajoe222 Posted April 30, 2018 Posted April 30, 2018 I reserve swim jigs for fishing vegetation. Their weedguard vs. the open hook of a swim bait and the ability to fish it in a similar fashion to a jig/trailer give it the nod in my book. Swim baits, are reserved for fishing over rock, gravel, or structure and off the bottom. I’ll even use one to quickly check out a ‘featureless’ flat when I don’t want the rattle of a crank. 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted April 30, 2018 Super User Posted April 30, 2018 The problem trying to answer this question is defining a swimbait vs a jig trailer. For example a fish head jig designed to be used with a swimbait trailer assembled as a swimbait with a soft body 5" to 12" swimbait, therefore is one and the same. A swim jig being a standard jig with or without skirt that is retrieved within the water column that may or may not have a small swimbait trailer is a different lure than a swimbait, it's a jig and trailer. Example a 1/8 oz darter head jig with 3" or 4" trailer isn't a swimbait, it's a swim jig. Tom 1 Quote
jtharris3 Posted April 30, 2018 Posted April 30, 2018 8 hours ago, Lottabass said: Thank you! I was referring to the difference from the fishes perspective. Well, some fish like skirts but others don't. I don't judge though. ? 1 Quote
Lottabass Posted April 30, 2018 Author Posted April 30, 2018 Thank you all! I appreciate the insight and humor (jtharris3)!!! I'm glad I joined this forum. Lot of good info! 1 Quote
Super User Angry John Posted May 1, 2018 Super User Posted May 1, 2018 This was a huge debate on another site. What is a swimbait, or a large bait. The California swim jigs with the 5" robo trailers are a very large bait but the trailer can be fished alone. I just make a 2 Oz limit. If it's larger than 2 oz and swims under water it's a swim bait. Punkers are just large topwaters. This rule bends as a swaiver 168 is not quite 2 Oz but is a swimbait. Then you have the group that breaks evert hinges down and a glide is a glide not a sb. Quote
Super User Cgolf Posted May 1, 2018 Super User Posted May 1, 2018 I guess I look at it this way. A swim jig is fished like a spinner bait and is an active bait for fish that want to chase. I think of swim baits like a Giron as finesse presentation for more neutral fish. Personally I think of baits like the rage swimmer more as a grub style bait when not rigged as a trailer. Definitely for more active fish. Quote
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