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#1
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Anyone know the best deal on the Internet for these?
Particularly in 3/8oz. I go through them rather quickly at Lake Hodges which is full of tree and brush structure right now. Drop shotting into this mess is productive but I lose quite a few weights. thanks |
#2
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MOJO weights?
"SHRED" wrote in message ... Anyone know the best deal on the Internet for these? Particularly in 3/8oz. I go through them rather quickly at Lake Hodges which is full of tree and brush structure right now. Drop shotting into this mess is productive but I lose quite a few weights. thanks -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#3
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What I do is pinch a bullet worm weight to the line with pliers, point up.
"SHRED" wrote in message ... Anyone know the best deal on the Internet for these? Particularly in 3/8oz. I go through them rather quickly at Lake Hodges which is full of tree and brush structure right now. Drop shotting into this mess is productive but I lose quite a few weights. thanks |
#4
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What I do is pinch a bullet worm weight on the line with the point up.
"SHRED" wrote in message ... Anyone know the best deal on the Internet for these? Particularly in 3/8oz. I go through them rather quickly at Lake Hodges which is full of tree and brush structure right now. Drop shotting into this mess is productive but I lose quite a few weights. thanks |
#5
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Alex wrote:
What I do is pinch a bullet worm weight on the line with the point up. Thanks for that tip! |
#6
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On Aug 13, 10:11 pm, SHRED wrote:
Alex wrote: What I do is pinch a bullet worm weight on the line with the point up. Thanks for that tip! If you will tie an overhand knot in the end of the line then toothpick it on rather than pinch it on it will usually slide off when you get hung and you can easily put another one on. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com |
#7
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Alex wrote:
What I do is pinch a bullet worm weight to the line with pliers, point up. "SHRED" wrote in message ... Anyone know the best deal on the Internet for these? Particularly in 3/8oz. I go through them rather quickly at Lake Hodges which is full of tree and brush structure right now. Drop shotting into this mess is productive but I lose quite a few weights. thanks I like to use a split shot behind the bullet weight, it will always slide off before your line breaks -- Rodney Long SpecTastic Wiggle rig Formally the Mojo Wiggle rig http://spectastictackle.com/ |
#8
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![]() "SHRED" wrote in message ... Anyone know the best deal on the Internet for these? Particularly in 3/8oz. I go through them rather quickly at Lake Hodges which is full of tree and brush structure right now. Drop shotting into this mess is productive but I lose quite a few weights. thanks Do like steelheaders of old did. Insert the pencil weight into a small piece of surgical tubing. then you could tie the tubing to the line with a small poundage line. ten you can just buy the rolls of lead sinker. |
#9
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Ronnie wrote:
On Aug 13, 10:11 pm, SHRED wrote: Alex wrote: What I do is pinch a bullet worm weight on the line with the point up. Thanks for that tip! If you will tie an overhand knot in the end of the line then toothpick it on rather than pinch it on it will usually slide off when you get hung and you can easily put another one on. Ronnie http://fishing.about.com I've read all these replies about what to use instead of a real drop shot weight with some degree of amusement. Been there, and done that will just about all of them. I started rigging something akin to a dropshot in the 80s, using a big split shot on the end of the line and the hook on a 3" dropper off the main line. The dropper made it a major pain to retie when you broke it off, and as often as not, I would just tie on a jighead after the 2nd or third time, for convenience sake. Then, in the mid-90s, I was 'reintroduced" to drop shotting by a Japanese friend (Kota Kiriyama, back when he lived in this neck of the woods and belonged to the same bass club as several of my fishing buddies). But Kota showed us how to rig it without the dropper line to the hook, tying the hook directly to the main line, and just using the tag end for the sinker. That was much easier to rig, and got me seriously into using the rig. He also used a special, Japanese sinker (Bakudan) that cinched to the line, but those were not readily available in the US, and my buddies and I devised all sorts of alternatives -- every one of which has been mentioned in this thread. For a long time, I used a standard slip sinker on the line, with a split shot crimped on beneath it, and a knot tied beneath that. Hint -- if you're going to use this setup or Ronnie's variation above, which is a great one, tie a loop knot instead of an overhand knot. The loop gives you something to hook over the reel handle to secure the rig without having the weight bounce all over the place when you run from spot to spot or put the rig away for the day. But my problem was still that there were too many steps in re-rigging and too often, when it broke the 2nd or 3rd time, I would often just go back to the tried and true jighead and worm combo. Finally, when Kiriyama, Rich Tauber and Brent Ehler started Bakudan in the US around 2000, I quickly switched to that setup, for the simple reason that it's the simplest, and easiest to rig and re-rig. That means when I lose a weight, I'm back fishing in seconds rather than minutes, and I NEVER switch away from the DS just because rigging another one would be a pain in the neck or too time consuming when the bite is hot & heavy. Yes, it's more expensive than the homebrew alternatives. But convenience and not wasting any of my all too limited fishing time is well worth the difference in cost to me. Of course I tried the cheaper copies of the Bakudan along the way. In my experience, none of them are as good, and the reason is the swivel/line cinch assembly. Basically, I've learned that there are three or four different mfgs of these in the far east, and the 'real' one costs several times as much as the knock-offs. But it also performs better. You'd think that the minor changes in the shape of that little keyhole cinch deal would be insignificant, but they aren't. The most common one (as found on the BPS copies and others) requires you to tie a knot in the end of the line, or it comes off too easily. If you're going to do that, might as well save even more money, and use a pegged slip sinker above the knot. Others cut the line instead of sliding off -- often just from the force of the cast, which is a real bummer. When the Bakudan company became available, I urged Lunker City to buy it. They did. And they replaced all the crude an well worn molds with new, but have stuck with the original swivel despite the ready availability of lower cost (and inferior) knock-offs. Using the real thing (and adopting nose hooking) has made DS fishing so convenient that it's been my #1 presentation option for the past 6 years or more, and has caught me thousands of fish. I can't imagine switching away from the real skinny cylinder, Bakudan weight. But if and when I run out on the water, It'll be Ronnie's variation -- the pegged slip sinker supported by a knot (except I'll use a loop knot) that I go with. |
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