I am looking for battery powered lights for night fishing. I need opinions on which are the brightest or best for the money.:fish
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I am looking for battery powered lights for night fishing. I need opinions on which are the brightest or best for the money.:fish
I have a berkly model that I bought at bass pro. I runs on aa batteries and is green. Have caught fish around it 2 out of the 3 times I have used it about 15 ft down.
I just bought a Quarrow 180 LED 12 volt. Bass Pro had it for $89.99 I found the exact same light at Academy for $59.99. I used it last night for the first time. It was very bright. I dropped the light in the water at sundown and there was a swarm of bait fish by dark.
I have a question : can someone tell me what is the purpose of putting lights down so deep :scratchhead
Most all of the night fishing w/lights, that I've ever done, has been with lights either above the surface, on the surface, or slightly below it. They've all worked to draw in the baitfish, and eventually the Crappie ... so I'm just curious as to why putting the lights down to depths that I've hardly ever even put a minnow or jig is going to make the situation any better. :dono
CrappyPappy, I have no idea on the answer to that question. Last night was my first time to try night fishing specifically for crappie and first time with a light. I was fishing about 12"fow so I sunk the light half way between surface and bottom. I will say that most of the crappie I have caught from this lake have been in the 16-20" depth range. It is a deep clear Lake that holds many great game fish, but confounds me when trying to find crappie every trip. I keep going back because of the two lakes that are close I like it better.
A lot of night fishermen recommend putting a light down at the thermocline line. I am not a night fishermen but have seen this on some of the videos on you tube
I have used a Coleman lantern in the past. We made a holder from a 2x4 which put the latern about 8' or so from the boat. Sometimes we would hang it in a tree we where fishing near. I have never sumerged a light though, always just above the water surface. I am thinking that a modern battery operated light would be less trouble and easier to deal with.
I'm with you....I don't know why folks drop them so deep. I have fished Dale Hollow at night many times and we just would hang the Colemans over the side for years. Now it is much more convenient to use the Hydra Glow or something similar and just drop them down a couple of feet. Fishing in 100 feet of water and even though water temps are in the high 80's even the trout will come up to surface for the bait.
Regards
My first thought would be because of bugs. I remember my dad having those big styrofoam crappie lights that floated on the surface. The bugs drove us nuts anytime we used them. I would think these submersible lights prevent the bug issue.
Although I haven't fished at night in many years, I've talked to a couple of guys that use these on Douglas and they fish around them at about 10-15 ft. deep. They claim they do quite well using these.
Actually the lights attract zooplankton which attracts shad which attracts gamefish. I'm sure I don't have 100% of the list, but that's one of the reasons to submerge the light...no bugs get attracted to bother you in the boat
Alumiglo Led Light....very good light.
I drop a green light about 2 feet down and I use 2 LED (6 LEDs on each) spot lights to shine down on the water. I get bait around the green drop light 2' down and I get bait on the surface. I then drop my lines all around and in the light 8'-15' down. The fish are low or on the outside of the "light ball" They come in to ambush bait and swim back out of the light. Don't drop your hooks right next to the light. You will not catch anything. Fish all around the light or in it but not too close to the light source. The moon does not play in with my night light fishing as the lights make the moon less visible or I fish under a bridge that block the moon light. Good luck!