Couldn’t tell you the last time I used one, don’t even carry any in the boat![]()
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I have time to tinker today. So I was reorganizing some of my tackle. Started looking at my floats and noticed a few things.
First, those Thill floats on the far left in the pic with all the floats together. They are a combination slip float and spring clip on float. But on closer inspection, the slot under the spring is extremely rough on one of them. It’s not cut too well on one of the others either. It was just cut in at an angle and left very rough at the bottom. Used on light line I think this would be a problem. I greatly prefer the L shaped cut on the other spring clip on floats. I also recall that these slip floats each came with a pre-rigged stop knot that you could slide off the top of the float and onto the line. These knots didn’t stop the bead though, it would go right over it. But the little pack of stop knots I bought separately worked great. I’m not sure why, but now that I’ve had this experience I won’t be buying anymore of those specific Thill floats. They were not cheap, about $4 each, and the only use they’ll be is for slip floats now. They’re not even my favorite. I like the foam Comal slip floats better. There’s a little yellow one shown there. I found it out on the lake. Turns out it’s my current favorite.
Then there’s the foam Bett’s and Comal cigar shaped peg floats in the lower right hand corner of the pic. They appear to be made for pegging and for slip float use, but the pegs in them are put together in two pieces, and the cap does not always line up. One is so far off the line didn’t go through it easily and I had to drill it out some. I was using it on 8 pound line at the time. It may have been fine on lighter line. But also notice the two tiny yellow and green pear shaped floats above those two Bett’s floats. Those are the Leland’s Lures Trout Magnet EZ Float. The pegs in those are made a good bit better. I also have some larger cigar floats that came in a Crappie Magnet kit. Same deal, made much better. These are details that matter to me, since I’m trying to learn to fish for crappie I want as little frustration as possible so when things don’t work I know it’s because of me not doing something just right and not because of the equipment. Looking closely at these today I have learned that in the future I need to pay more attention to the floats and how they’re made. Spending a lot on a float apparently does not mean it is a good one.
Lastly, what is the purpose of that orange and black float having the weight? I know it would make it cast better, but I’ve watched about a hundred crappie fishing videos at least, maybe 200, and nobody has used a float like that. It seems it would actually be counterproductive based on some of the methods I’ve seen used. When crappie hit the bait on the drop and swim upwards, I wouldn’t even know because the float would just be sitting there pointing straight up. This is another float I found on the lake. I tend to do that a lot. I have quite a collection now of found and saved floats.
So what floats do you use and why?
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Couldn’t tell you the last time I used one, don’t even carry any in the boat![]()
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Nugget LIKED above post
I use the foam ones like the four you have on the right of the picture pretty often, depending on the size of jig head I'm using, but I probably use the Thill slip bobbers the most because of the times when I have to cast into a small opening in the duck blinds I fish, where the water is 6-7' deep, and the fish are on the bottom. The ones I use have the little brass opening attached on the top, though, that allows you to slip the line through the bobber.
I like using the Comal floats myself when I use a float usually in the spring. I get mine at chuckanddeb.com in bulk there cheap good quality and if I needed I have plenty to give away if anyone is in need.
2006 tracker pro crappie 175 60hp EFI Mercury.
1993 Tracker pro deep v 17 60hp tiller conversion.
"Most of the" world is covered by water. A fisherman's job is simple: Pick out the best parts.crappie carp81 LIKED above post
I miss the old Thill Gold Medal mini Shy Bytes
Oh I could wrestle a monster fish
The weighted stick float works great for live bait fishing for bluegill. I fish quite a bit from the bank in some smaller lakes and a lot of times the bluegill will school in open water 60-100ft out. The weighted float throws like a bullet when you need the extra distance.
Last one I bought was a Thill (balsa) .... the other 20 or so that I have were removed from trees, the shoreline, or floating in the lake. All but a few are slip floats. I think I've actually used one, once in the last decade or so, and that was before I had Livescope.
I keep one outfit rigged with a slip float (Thill Premium), but don't always take it along with me to the lake, unless I know I'm going to be using live bait.
And, yes, you are correct in your assumption that the weighted float is for extra casting distance. And you are also correct in thinking that it's useless for "lift bites" (which is why I don't have any of those types of floats).
I mainly use Comal pear shaped weighted floats in the two smaller sizes, 1" and 1.5". Smaller one will hold up a jig up to 1/24 and the 1.5 will hold a jig up to 3/32. Anything heavier is fished without a float. I like these because the cast tiny baits a good distance to reach those brush piles from the bank which is how I fish.
I too like the thill slip floats.
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heavenornot.netJamesdean LIKED above post