gbassman519 Posted July 8, 2020 Posted July 8, 2020 when useing swim baits, do most of you put the tail up or down on a weighted hook ? Quote
Global Moderator Mike L Posted July 8, 2020 Global Moderator Posted July 8, 2020 When swimming the boot tail is always down. Mike 1 Quote
galyonj Posted July 8, 2020 Posted July 8, 2020 The only time I rig a paddletail/boottail upside down is when I'm using it as a chatterbait trailer. And, realistically, it doesn't matter what I do with a chatterbait because I never catch anything on them. I only ever throw them when I'm bored and frustrated because I think they're neat. 1 2 Quote
moguy1973 Posted July 8, 2020 Posted July 8, 2020 Tail down always. It won't have the right action if it's the same way as the hook. Same with curly tail jigs. The curl goes on the side opposite of the hook. Quote
billmac Posted July 8, 2020 Posted July 8, 2020 Boot tail, down. Curly tail, up. I think the former is kind of standard, and the latter is just my preference. 1 Quote
Super User WRB Posted July 8, 2020 Super User Posted July 8, 2020 Boot tails are designed to be down, how you fish them is up to you. Down the tail tends to rock and move the swimbaits head more, up less keel action therefore less movement. hand poured worms with curl tails are sideways. The question becomes flat top up or round bottom down....both work. Quote
Super User RoLo Posted July 8, 2020 Super User Posted July 8, 2020 It seems to me that the "tail-down" convention began with ribbon-tail worms and ribbon-tail grubs. During the drop, a pliable ribbon-tail bait would sometimes foul on the hook, hence the "tail-down" mode. Although boot-tails and paddle-tails do not run this risk, the tail-down mode has become the norm. To extend the life of a swimbait, I won't hesitate to rig the bait "tail-up". Roger 1 Quote
Super User OkobojiEagle Posted July 8, 2020 Super User Posted July 8, 2020 Now that we've got this settled... flat side up or down on a fluke?... oe 1 Quote
Heartland Posted July 8, 2020 Posted July 8, 2020 2 minutes ago, OkobojiEagle said: Now that we've got this settled... flat side up or down on a fluke?... oe I always rig them the flat side up, no real reason this is just what feels right to me. Quote
Vilas15 Posted July 8, 2020 Posted July 8, 2020 54 minutes ago, RoLo said: It seems to me that the "tail-down" convention began with ribbon-tail worms and ribbon-tail grubs. During the drop, a pliable ribbon-tail bait would sometimes foul on the hook, hence the "tail-down" mode. Although boot-tails and paddle-tails do not run this risk, the tail-down mode has become the norm. To extend the life of a swimbait, I won't hesitate to rig the bait "tail-up". Roger On a grub i also put the tail curling opposite of the hook, aka down. This makes sense. 1 Quote
SeaCrow Posted July 8, 2020 Posted July 8, 2020 4 hours ago, Heartland said: I always rig them the flat side up, no real reason this is just what feels right to me. ^^^same Quote
Super User RoLo Posted July 8, 2020 Super User Posted July 8, 2020 Same story with Super Flukes, I'll rig'em belly-up and belly-down to extend the life of the bait. Trust me, most bass aren't paying attention ? Roger 1 Quote
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