Those are nice. Should catch bunches of fish with those.
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Those are nice. Should catch bunches of fish with those.
Proud Member of Team Geezer
Charlie Weaver USN/ENC 1965-1979
Well done, good colors.
Creativity is just intelligence fooling around
Nice looking spinners!!
Very nice spinners! Did you make them from scratch? Thoase are really cool! I would be interested in knowing how you bend the wire just right to twist it off on top and bottom and what kind of weight is that? Just lead weight? Thanks for any info in advance.
USAF Retired and fishing!
These are just the 1/16 oz worm weights you can buy them anywhere Wally World etc. I use a scrap piece of wire and powder coat and cure them. These I'll be using for trout so I used a lighter weigh wire 0.024 gauge. Wire I bend on a Twist Tec I purchased about a year ago. Highly recommend the bender, a wee bit pricey but you can make just about anything on it. Twistech Wire Former
I also use the 1/8 - 5/8 oz bullets lead weights the same way. Heavier wire and usually dressing the treble with deer hair or duck feather. These trebles are dressed with a palmer hackle feather.
Here are a few of the others I make
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Awesome! Thanks for the information. I may have to go and buy one of the twisters and do some of my own sometime. Very nice work on all of your jigs. Nice pics too!
USAF Retired and fishing!
Thanks for post gave me some ideas and will be buying tool also!
Just a heads up the only down side I have found with the twist tec is the loop size. It's a lot bigger than the conventional spinners you buy in stores. I've always wondered if the water displacement from the bigger loop makes any difference.
One of my best memories as a kid was absolutely killing a school of BIG feeding white bass herding shad up on a flat with homemade inline spinners. They were bullet sinker weights painted white with black spots, on white dressed trebles with silver blades and red beads.