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#1
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Ok, it is not actually a lure, they are sinkers, and they come in a filet
lined case. They come two in a box, they are battery operated, and they omit a ping sound when wet. I guess Bill Dance sold them on an infomercial. The kit includes one bullet and one egg sinker. One of my buddies show them to me. First do they work? He got them as a Christmas gift three years ago and has never used them. When I asked why, he said they cost $69 and he is afraid he will lose them. They look pretty cool, and only ping or tick when they become wet so as to save on battery life. I wanted to try them so bad, I offered to buy them off of him, but he refused stating he couldn't sell a Christmas gift. He probably saved me a butt chewing from the wife for wasting money. So, again, do they work? -- Craig Baugher www.yessssports.com |
#2
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![]() Craig wrote: Ok, it is not actually a lure, they are sinkers, and they come in a filet lined case. They come two in a box, they are battery operated, and they omit a ping sound when wet. I guess Bill Dance sold them on an infomercial. The kit includes one bullet and one egg sinker. One of my buddies show them to me. First do they work? He got them as a Christmas gift three years ago and has never used them. When I asked why, he said they cost $69 and he is afraid he will lose them. They look pretty cool, and only ping or tick when they become wet so as to save on battery life. I wanted to try them so bad, I offered to buy them off of him, but he refused stating he couldn't sell a Christmas gift. He probably saved me a butt chewing from the wife for wasting money. So, again, do they work? Only when hunting other submarines...... pat |
#3
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Water is able to conduct electricity, so you have 2 wires separated
by a short distance. When the distance between the 2 wires gets wet, electricity flows through them and the thing turns on and pings. -- "Tis better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt." |
#4
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Water is able to conduct electricity
Water by itself will not conduct electricity. Other things become better conductors when wet tho. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#5
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![]() "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... Water is able to conduct electricity Water by itself will not conduct electricity. Other things become better conductors when wet tho. Tell that to one of our firefighters. We had a basement fire, thick choking smoke, unable to see anything but a dull orange glow of the fire. He advanced the line near the fire and opened the nozzle. The homeowner had left the circuit breaker box open with the cover removed. Electricity went down the hose stream until the transformer on the pole blew, leaving him unconscious. We carried him out, twitching and scorched. He survived the experience, but you'll have a hard time convincing him that water does not conduct electricity. It might not conduct as well as other things, but I for one believe that it does! Otherwise, boom shocking electro surveys wouldn't work. -- Steve OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
#6
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Ditto here. I was wading the Tridelphia Res. up in Maryland and my legs
started to tingle, so I started walking back towards bank and it got worse. Then I finally almost stepped on an unmarked, unburied electrical cable..ouch. Glad I saw it before I stepped on it. I suppose I could have been standing on something that was conducting it, but I didn't see anything. --- Chuck Coger http://www.fishin-pro.com "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in message ... "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... Water is able to conduct electricity Water by itself will not conduct electricity. Other things become better conductors when wet tho. Tell that to one of our firefighters. We had a basement fire, thick choking smoke, unable to see anything but a dull orange glow of the fire. He advanced the line near the fire and opened the nozzle. The homeowner had left the circuit breaker box open with the cover removed. Electricity went down the hose stream until the transformer on the pole blew, leaving him unconscious. We carried him out, twitching and scorched. He survived the experience, but you'll have a hard time convincing him that water does not conduct electricity. It might not conduct as well as other things, but I for one believe that it does! Otherwise, boom shocking electro surveys wouldn't work. -- Steve OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
#7
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I was wading the Tridelphia Res. up in Maryland and my legs
started to tingle, so I started walking back towards bank and it got worse. Then I finally almost stepped on an unmarked, unburied electrical cable..ouch. Glad I saw it before I stepped on it. I think the wet ground you were standing on was what was conducting the current, not the water. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#8
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Electricity
went down the hose stream until the transformer on the pole blew, leaving him unconscious. We carried him out, twitching and scorched. He survived the experience, but you'll have a hard time convincing him that water does not conduct electricity. It might not conduct as well as other things, but I for one believe that it does! Otherwise, boom shocking electro surveys wouldn't work. Sounds like the basement floor was wet. Are you sure the electricty traveled in the water stream and not in the wet floor? As far as electroshocking - you can force a current to jump from one electrode to another and shock the fish in between, just like you can force a current to jump between two electrodes in the air. But the air, and the water, are not conductors. We used to have a guy come around to the schools from the power company. He would hook up a light bulb on one wire and run the end down into a beaker of water. Another wire would be plugged in and run into the water about six inches away. The light bulb would not light until he touched the two wires together. I think sal****er, if salty enough, will conduct electricty, as will other solutions. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#9
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Any farm boys in the group? I remember getting tricked into peeing on an
electric fence when I was a kid. Must have been the salt. My mom always said I used too much. ;-) Joe Z. As far as electroshocking - you can force a current to jump from one electrode to another and shock the fish in between, just like you can force a current to jump between two electrodes in the air. But the air, and the water, are not conductors. We used to have a guy come around to the schools from the power company. He would hook up a light bulb on one wire and run the end down into a beaker of water. Another wire would be plugged in and run into the water about six inches away. The light bulb would not light until he touched the two wires together. I think sal****er, if salty enough, will conduct electricty, as will other solutions. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#10
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I agree with Ronnie. Water (chemically clean or distilled) is a very bad
conductor. But the "regular" water has some minerals in it that are making it conductive. Sal****er is the best. Isn't it amazing? Dry salt is not a conductor. Neither is distilled water. Mix them together and you have a pretty descent conductor! The moral: don't try to plug a wet senko in the wall :-) Cheers, Nikolay On Tue, 11 Nov 2003, Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers wrote: "RGarri7470" wrote in message ... Water is able to conduct electricity Water by itself will not conduct electricity. Other things become better conductors when wet tho. Tell that to one of our firefighters. We had a basement fire, thick choking smoke, unable to see anything but a dull orange glow of the fire. He advanced the line near the fire and opened the nozzle. The homeowner had left the circuit breaker box open with the cover removed. Electricity went down the hose stream until the transformer on the pole blew, leaving him unconscious. We carried him out, twitching and scorched. He survived the experience, but you'll have a hard time convincing him that water does not conduct electricity. It might not conduct as well as other things, but I for one believe that it does! Otherwise, boom shocking electro surveys wouldn't work. -- Steve OutdoorFrontiers http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods http://www.herefishyfishy.com |
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