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#1
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According to Sea Angler magazine, (Jan 2007, page 46) WD40 has "a big
following as an effective fish attractant and bait additive." What say you? |
#2
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It works.
"Ray" wrote in message ... According to Sea Angler magazine, (Jan 2007, page 46) WD40 has "a big following as an effective fish attractant and bait additive." What say you? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I am using the free version of SPAMfighter for private users. It has removed 112 spam emails to date. Paying users do not have this message in their emails. Try SPAMfighter for free now! |
#3
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![]() "Ray" wrote in message ... According to Sea Angler magazine, (Jan 2007, page 46) WD40 has "a big following as an effective fish attractant and bait additive." What say you? I heard a rumour many years ago and do no not if true or not, but the rumour was that WD40 contains fish oil |
#4
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There is a strong body of belief in this sublect.
As WD40 seems to break down oil (careful how you spray your reels) you could believe that it also breaks down fish oil and what ever "oil" there is in worm. If this is so then bait sprayed with WD40 would tend to release its oils more quickly thus presnting a good scent trail from early in the cast. It would tend to run out a lot quicker though, so more frequent re-bailting is called for, more scent ,more often, more fish?! Tight lines Keith M "Neil" wrote in message ... "Ray" wrote in message ... According to Sea Angler magazine, (Jan 2007, page 46) WD40 has "a big following as an effective fish attractant and bait additive." What say you? I heard a rumour many years ago and do no not if true or not, but the rumour was that WD40 contains fish oil |
#5
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I spent a lot of time and effort keeping all detergent and mineral oil off
my hands. I told my anglers (I'm a former charter crewman and current charter skipper) not to contaminate their bait or end tackle. I was amazed when a party of anglers sprayed every single mackeral flapper bait with WD40. I went off on one and told them off - needless to say they caught loads of Conger and Ling. They even had a fair whack of Cod. Smartass (me) who did not "contaminate" anything caught next to nothing. That said, mineral oil and detergents do cut your chances so what I now do if I have to touch the engine is wear disposable gloves. They can get holes so holes or not I wash my hands with warm water and washing up liquid. I re wash with fresh water and spray my hands lightly with WD40. Then I use a towel to dry my hands as well as I can. I have been told that WD40 is a vegetable oil in a solvent. The solvent is volatile and dissipates quickly slowed only by the vegetable oil. Combination with old sticky oil causes the old oil to thin and mix easily with the vegetable oil. Some of the WD40 lookalikes are mineral oil based and I don't ever use them. I try now to never say never about anything in angling! Enjoy your fishing, Chris W "Gonfishin" wrote in message ... There is a strong body of belief in this sublect. As WD40 seems to break down oil (careful how you spray your reels) you could believe that it also breaks down fish oil and what ever "oil" there is in worm. If this is so then bait sprayed with WD40 would tend to release its oils more quickly thus presnting a good scent trail from early in the cast. It would tend to run out a lot quicker though, so more frequent re-bailting is called for, more scent ,more often, more fish?! Tight lines Keith M "Neil" wrote in message ... "Ray" wrote in message ... According to Sea Angler magazine, (Jan 2007, page 46) WD40 has "a big following as an effective fish attractant and bait additive." What say you? I heard a rumour many years ago and do no not if true or not, but the rumour was that WD40 contains fish oil |
#6
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![]() "Christopher Wildman" wrote in message . uk... I spent a lot of time and effort keeping all detergent and mineral oil off my hands. I told my anglers (I'm a former charter crewman and current charter skipper) not to contaminate their bait or end tackle. I was amazed when a party of anglers sprayed every single mackeral flapper bait with WD40. I went off on one and told them off - needless to say they caught loads of Conger and Ling. They even had a fair whack of Cod. Smartass (me) who did not "contaminate" anything caught next to nothing. That said, mineral oil and detergents do cut your chances so what I now do if I have to touch the engine is wear disposable gloves. They can get holes so holes or not I wash my hands with warm water and washing up liquid. I re wash with fresh water and spray my hands lightly with WD40. Then I use a towel to dry my hands as well as I can. I have been told that WD40 is a vegetable oil in a solvent. The solvent is volatile and dissipates quickly slowed only by the vegetable oil. Combination with old sticky oil causes the old oil to thin and mix easily with the vegetable oil. Some of the WD40 lookalikes are mineral oil based and I don't ever use them. I try now to never say never about anything in angling! Enjoy your fishing, Chris W "Gonfishin" wrote in message ... There is a strong body of belief in this sublect. As WD40 seems to break down oil (careful how you spray your reels) you could believe that it also breaks down fish oil and what ever "oil" there is in worm. If this is so then bait sprayed with WD40 would tend to release its oils more quickly thus presnting a good scent trail from early in the cast. It would tend to run out a lot quicker though, so more frequent re-bailting is called for, more scent ,more often, more fish?! Tight lines Keith M "Neil" wrote in message ... "Ray" wrote in message ... According to Sea Angler magazine, (Jan 2007, page 46) WD40 has "a big following as an effective fish attractant and bait additive." What say you? I heard a rumour many years ago and do no not if true or not, but the rumour was that WD40 contains fish oil Beats me I have never fancied the idea, me I get a bit of squid or makkie on- but wiki disagrees with the fish/veggie ideas claiming that it is mineral based as the safety data sheet shows http://www.wd40.com/Download/?/Brand...aerosol.us.pdf either way its brilliant for getting dirty grease, paint etc etc off your hands. Derek |
#7
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![]() Derek wrote: Beats me I have never fancied the idea, me I get a bit of squid or makkie on- but wiki disagrees with the fish/veggie ideas claiming that it is mineral based as the safety data sheet shows http://www.wd40.com/Download/?/Brand...aerosol.us.pdf either way its brilliant for getting dirty grease, paint etc etc off your hands. Derek What about putting a cod liver oil capule on a hook? |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
WD40 Pike Attractor | Harry | UK Coarse Fishing | 6 | January 5th, 2004 08:58 AM |