Model Jigs Free Helpful Fact
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In case you need some more details, here is a full description and review of Model Jigs.
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Casting rod and reel. What line would you use?
I just purchased a Shimano® Spirex® FG Spinning Reel - Model SR4000FG with a Shimano® Voltaeus® Spinning Rods - VTS-66M. Model Jigs I already have a set up using braided line for trolling. In the lake I fish, I normally catch Walleye, Northern Pike and silver bass. I normally use crank bait but I want to start jigging. I was thinking of either 10 or 12 lb fluorocarbon. Any suggestions would help.i have never used PLINE but i have read that a lot of people use it.
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December 14th, 2010 at 5:23 am
head for Wal-Mart. I got a one for exactly the same use myself. I think it’s made by Plano. It even has a spot on it so you can clip it to your belt or put i on a cord to sling it over your shoulder or easy portability. You’ll pay more in shipping from basspro than you can buy the item for at Wal-Mart. Besides, the sooner you have it, the sooner you can be out catching a “mess” of Crappie for supper. Good luck
December 14th, 2010 at 5:02 pm
go to your local conveience store..you may have to try a couple different ones and just ask them if they are participating in this promotion..also try the super kmarts and grocery stores…good luck
December 15th, 2010 at 5:32 am
It does not have a magnetic adjustment on the reel. It is a six pin centrifugal drag system. There will be a round knob just under and beside the handle that adjusts the casting friction to help keep you from back lashing. The six pin system can be adjusted for fine tuning it to different lure weights.You turn the knob to the right it makes it harder to backlash but you also lose some casting distance. You turn it to the left the system becomes freer but increases the chance of a back lash.Somewhere in between there is a happy medium.
December 15th, 2010 at 4:53 pm
the eccentric gear could be your problem.this is what drives the moving part of your jigsaw..if the motor part didnt smoke it is probably not burnt up….if it hums the brushes arent bad…the brushes are part of the circuit and if they were bad motor wouldnt hum…I would suggest you take the gear head apart and see if something has broke or come loose…
December 16th, 2010 at 5:09 am
Most anglers regard jigs as vertical drop baits. In the applications discussed above, a balanced vertical fall is important in triggering bites. But the jig’s combination of density, compact size, and alluring features also lend themselves to a horizontal presentation called swimming a jig. From the Upper Mississippi River to Alabama and Arkansas, jig swimmers have accounted for huge bass and have won many major tournaments.Tom Monsoor, the man to beat in Upper Mississippi River tournaments, swims a jig throughout the summer season and into early fall, targeting weedy and wood-laden backwaters of the Mississippi where largemouths abide. “Swimming jigs work best in relatively clear water, since it gets reaction strikes from fish that see the bait passing overhead,” Monsoor notes.”Instead of dropping a jig into a hole in cover, you make long casts and move the bait over varied cover, calling bass out. Depending on water depth and the thickness of cover, pointy-nose jigs from 1/4 to 3/8 ounce work well.” Monsoor crafts his own swimming jigs, as do many practitioners of this unusual technique.Mitch Looper of Barling, Arkansas, a big-bass expert, swims a jig from the Prespawn Period until Thanksgiving. “The best jig-swimming days are cloudy and windy,” he notes. “Bass are up and active and ready to hit a moving bait. Fish it wherever you find dense shallow vegetation or woodcover. The key is to keep the bait high in the water column, within a foot of the surface, swimming with a steady retrieve or with slight undulations imparted with the rod.”Hold your rod at about the 10 o’clock position while winding the bait. When you get a strike, don’t set right away, but lower the rod tip and retrieve slack, then set hard.” Looper employs a flat swimming head that planes through the water. Like Monsoor, he uses a thin, light weedguard, since the bait passes above the densest cover, and the thin guard will not interfere with a long-distance hookset.For most applications, jig swimmers favor a skirt of living rubber since it undulates as the lure moves, and puffs out when the retrieve is paused. Some anglers tie skirts with an underlayer of mylar to increase flash. Blues, browns, greens, and blacks work well where bluegills and perch are key forage. Where shad are the prime forage, white is popular, particularly in fall when bass feed heavily on the pale baitfish in tributary creeks.A bulky trailer helps keep a swimming jig near the surface, and pork has been a traditional favorite, with the big Uncle Josh #1 chunk in brown, blue, or black to match darker jigs, and Uncle Josh’s white Spring Lizard Pup popular on white jigs. Pork also resists tearing when passing through tough vegetation like bulrushes, alligator weed, and maidencane, or brushy cover. Stanley Jigs has designed a swimming head with a bladelike lip that creates a wide wobbling action for use over grassbeds and brush. Since jig-swimming works best in heavy cover, medium-heavy to heavy baitcasting combos are the rule, with longer rods popular to increase casting distance, to keep the lure up in the water column, and to set hooks. Braided line is prime around thick vegetation, as it slices through the salad, maintaining contact with the fish and keeping its head up during the battle.One further jig-swimming application involves big hair jigs known as Preacher Jigs. Where large shad are key forage, it’s a deadly fall presentation. Some other good sminning jigs are the Looper swim jig, Stanley Swimmin’ jig, Bulldog Jig spinner, and the Booyah swim jig. Have fun and tight lines.
December 16th, 2010 at 5:15 pm
i like the remix : ]
December 17th, 2010 at 4:59 am
Well, if you like Pflueger reels you’d probably love the Supreme. I own 2 Supreme’s and they are fantastic. I’ve owned mine for approx 2 years and never had an issue with them and they are one of the smoothest, lightest reels made, (rivaling higher-end Shimano & Daiwa reels). Check them out and make sure to read the reviews- http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_10151_-1_10001_94739____SearchResultsHere are some other good choices- http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_10151_-1_10001_10200678_151001002_151000000_151001000_151-1-2http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_10151_-1_10001_2038_151001002_151000000_151001000_151-1-2(Although the Daiwa BG Series don’t have all the “bells & whistles” of other reels it is a “Bomb-proof” reel that can easily be used 10 + years!)http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_10151_-1_10001_96639_151001002_151000000_151001000_151-1-2http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product_10151_-1_10001_102801_100001002_100000000_100001000_100-1-2Hope these give you some good ideas…good luck in your search.