![]() |
CCB Giant Pikie question ?
finally started making a couple ,, Does anyone have weighting and locations ,,thanks .. Pikie is the 11" ccb
|
11" is that the jointed :huh:
Jigman |
Yes ... jointed jiggy .. I mean ccb jointed giant pikie ..
|
Quote:
|
1 Attachment(s)
Here's some jointed giants. top one is hahn, second from top is ccbco
|
1 Attachment(s)
On the giant jointed that I have, the lead is in the back part of the front section. Put in just below center at the join. Rockfish9 had some comments on these a while back. Might search for that. Some good stuff :kewl: Basically, you can place the lead in the back part of the front section, or do two shots: one around the chin and one around the back part of the front section. Each will give you a slightly different action. I chose two shots for mine, 3 1/2 oz, though a little shorter than the CCBC ones.
Attachment 25187 I also used Rockfish's method of doubling the front wire section to get a tighter join. I tried it this way and just doing a tail wrap on the front. The former gave me a better action. Jigman |
1 Attachment(s)
OK, OK, DON'T DO IT, EDDY!!!!!!
1/4 x 1.5 through wire in the tail 1/4 x 1.75 solid in the gut Phew! |
Quote:
That is a lot of lead George. Way more than I would of ever thought. |
Now I see the doubling of the wire in the front of the back half . Is that what you mean?
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
What ???????? The front section or the rear section. If the front section then you have no knots in the wire at all right??
|
Now I get it. Thanks for putting it in simpleton terms. Do you use a grommet on the back end of the front part? Much neater. I am doing a Pikie and that will work perfectly.
|
Quote:
This is how Creek chub did all thier giants. |
Why no grommet in front of rear section in x-ray.
It's not a tumor |
Thanks George .. thats great ... CS told me few years ago /// forgot .
|
2 Attachment(s)
Paul, may be these will help, along with the above descriptions.
Attachment 25194 Attachment 25195 Jigman |
That's how Pikie Mike wires his jointed's
I have been wanting a giant CCBC plug for years just never got around to it, winch wouldn't get me one:conf: guess I'll hit ebay Paul, I'll show you how it's done. I'll call you tom., I need to start your stuff before I get swamped. |
Numby, thanks!
|
Thank you all. Aways wondered why they used screws on the lip. I would think that is the reason for using the screws to hold the lip on, in case you don't figure out the length of the wire perfectly and the loop you open up in the back half of the front part doesn't get tight enough to pull the lip tight against the plug. Allows a little wiggle room and you don't end up with a loose lip. Maybe?
|
I think all the ccb pikies/ surfsters have the lips either double screwed on the large or one single screw on the small .
I'd say they totally finished the plug and slid the lip in loose at the end ..Sure as fish are caught and wire is stretched lip would loosen if not screwed ...now you could just epoxy them in .. |
Quote:
Put your wire through rhw plug, measure 3/8" from body and mark with a sharpie, cut the tag end so that is it is the same length as the tag end in the preformed loop.... the mark will be the center of the loop, I like to preform the loop first then squeeze it shut, but ONLY ENOUGH TO PASS IT THROUGH THE SWIVEL,the wire must be of an anealed nature ot it will break when you try to open it back up. now insert the wire into the plug, the double wire goes through a #1 swivel with no problem, I also like to use a small washer at the joint ( again see the plug I made) now go to a block of wood, using an awl, push it into the wire to spread the joint, I then place it onto a block of wood and hit =the awl with a hammer to start the process, I then move it to another section on the block that I have drilled out(3/16") and drive the awl in as far as needed to form a neat loop... by using an awl, the taper make the process eaiser and alows tyou to make the lopp as large as small as you want... I'm actualy working on several jointed plugs now, I'll take soem photos tonight and post the process of how I do it... |
Did ccb make a 10 1/2" jointed pikie? Or would that be the 11" bait mentioned in this thread?
|
2 Attachment(s)
I think they only made the one (#800).
There is a short fat jointed plug called the jointed striper pikie 6800 and its straight version the striper pikie 6900 (some of which used a surfster lip). There is the giant straight pikie 6000 which is a longer version of the striper pikie. All three are very fat plugs unlike the giant jointed. Here are the 6800, 6000, and 800 Although people talk about using the giant jointed plug on the outer cape I don't think many guys fished them much. They are a pain to carry, hard to cast without conventional stuff, and their action is under-whelming (although the pull in surf might perk them up). I built some versions of the BM/Pichney clone but have not done well with them. Here are some of them. |
1 Attachment(s)
Ok cool thanks, my friend wanted me to duplicate some for him he was able to borrow a giant jointed that measures 10 1/2" I wasn't sure if it used the same 1/4" diameter tailweights as the one mentioned in this thread. I remeber reading in one of Frank's books he mentions a 12 or 13" giant jointed which had me confused.
I spun up one today out of awc, still want to try turning one out of wrc I think the white cedar will be a little overweight. The original he has weighs 3.48oz unrigged. I'll be lobbing these from a breachway using an allstar 1208 which should be able to handle the weight.:fishin: |
Quote:
I've made quie a few of these.. and fish a fair amount of them as well... the mid plug body weight needs to be reduced... the heavy slug was put there to combat the back from humping up... I use 5/0 VMC on mine and reduce the weight... a single siwash on the tail keeps the action real... the treble tends to deaden the action.. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:09 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright 1998-20012 Striped-Bass.com