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Thread: Pushing Cranks

  1. #21
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    HEY Scott, do you think this set up will work. don't have any bank sinkers but plenty of these 1 oz eggs. i will be using bandit 300's mostly. will the 3 oz of weight push them better than 2 oz's. i can easily add more weight. also what size line do you use??

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  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by tritonman View Post
    I don't think so. I think your weight and line out pretty much control your depth
    Scott, Thanks for this thread.
    I don't have any experience pushing and am trying to make some sense bout the correlation between weight, lure, speed, line and line out... Let's go with 10# mono, bandit 300, 3 oz weight, 1.7 mph and bout 20 ft line. Any idea how deep they run? And if I want it to go deeper all I need to do is add another oz weight? Or less to shallow up? And will the 200 run about the same as the 300 with all other factors the same?
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  3. #23
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    EZ that exact setup is how I pushed last summer. I could watch the cranks on the bow depth finder at 12' down.

    Another way to add the weight like Scott does is adding a 3 way cross line swivel instead of the loop knot. Our water is a little clearer and I use a clear or flouro 4' leader to the crank. I added a splitring & snapswivel to the middle swivel. I can snap the 3 oz weights on/off quickly when moving or when done for the day. Will take a pic next time I run them.

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  4. #24
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    Thanks, what I'm really trying to understand is what are the main determining factors for controlling the depth. There are places where I know there are crappie and it's only 8-9 fow, and other places that I know they are there also and it's 14-15 fow.. And they are somewhere between say 5 fow and 15 fow and I need to adjust my depth to load em up..
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  5. #25
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  6. #26
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    Cool imfo

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  7. #27
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    EZ, you control your depth by simply letting out more line. The 3 oz bank sinkers I use will take it down to 30 ft if you want or you can run them 5 ft deep. At 1.7 mph the line will be running back at around 45 degrees so you'd run around 10 ft of line out from the surface to get around 7 ft of depth.

    windstone- You can push using 2 oz instead of 3 but your line will be going back at more of an angle. I started out using 5 oz bank sinkers and the line goes almost straight down but it's a bugger getting a fish in with that much weight. 3 is just a happy medium for me. I use 20 lb braid but 10 lb mono would do fine.
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  8. #28
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    EZ - To make things a little more complicated, think of a right triangle. The top would be where your line enters the water. If your line is going back at 45 degrees, your depth would be 2/3 of the amount of line out.
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  9. #29
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    Now that makes more sense to me. A square plus B square equals C square. Got it..

    Dont for get the 2,4,5 and the 6,8,10 rule.

    What I have, some 2 oz, 3 oz and 4 oz weights. Jus gonna have to get out on the water and experiment.
    good tip on the line angle tho..
    Last edited by E-Z Poleholder; 04-27-2012 at 06:42 PM.
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  10. #30
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    Ha Ha, just play with different things and find what works for you.
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