Cool concept teach. I just want the old red/white, wooden, jointed musky plugs to be available. They were deadly!
@Fishingwithsarvar2 жыл бұрын
Very good bro 👌👌🏆
@CaptainBax4 жыл бұрын
Not to discourage you but a couple of tips if I may, lose the fins, this is an advance skill in lure making and I personally would use molded plastic fins if I needed them on lets say a glide/swimbait. Solid fins can play havoc with action, hook up rates and for crank bait lures I don't think fins are needed and can be just another thing for the lure to get hang up on. The bib gives the lure it's action along with shape, tow point positioning and weight positioning. Fins make the whole build far too complicated then it needs to be in my opinion, also I would cut the lure in half, then stick both halves back together with double sided tape to shape it. This makes it easier to add weight to the inside later on in the build and place the through wire for hooks, the added bonus with this method is that you know everything is centered. You can also cut just deep enough to place the through wire and drill holes for weight in the bottom of the lure after it's all shaped but with this method you need to do more filling & sanding. Anyway don't be discouraged by a failure it's the only way we learn.
@hashimotoconcepts4 жыл бұрын
Your insight is very all correct, thank you for constructive feedback back. In hindsight there are many things with this bait I would not do now. Failure is a huge part of the process and I felt that that should be shared
@Slabz_sb4 жыл бұрын
🔥🔥🔥🤙🤙🤙🤙
@keales95644 жыл бұрын
Try putting the weight at the bottom of lure...before and after treble hook. I bet it would work a lot better.
@hashimotoconcepts4 жыл бұрын
You are right, I am always learning and evolving. There is many things I would do differently today for sure. I appreciate you watched and your feed back!