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Go Back   Striper Talk Striped Bass Fishing, Surfcasting, Boating » Build Stuff: Custom Plug & Lure Building, Rod Building » Plug Building - Got Wood?

Plug Building - Got Wood? Got Plug?

View Poll Results: Do you test your swimming plugs bfore painting them?
Yes, absolutely. I need to know that they will swim incase I have to change the weighting. 14 38.89%
Yes, just double checking on plugs that I have made before and know they worked before. 3 8.33%
No, I just wing it 11 30.56%
No, I have it down pat and they usually work after they are all done 3 8.33%
no, I don't have to because I am that good. 4 11.11%
wait 3 years and copy BM 1 2.78%
no place to test them so I float/wait and test on fish 0 0%
Voters: 36. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 01-01-2005, 03:39 PM   #1
fishing bum wannabe
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I test prototypes in my "test tank" (actually it is a brook in my back yard), until I get the action I am looking for. Then I take the prototypes down to the North River where I can test them in different types of current. When all the tinkering is done, reweighting, reshaping lips etc, the prototypes that don't pan out get chucked, and the ones that do get patched up and painted/repainted and end up in my plug bag. Usually I make even my prototypes from a duplicator template so that if they work out, I have an accurate template all done. I keep a record on the template specifying dimensions, location and size of holes, weights etc, so that when I make a batch they are as close to the final prototype as possible. In most cases I don't test every plug, at least not until I am out on the water and fine tune them. Some types of plugs such as popping plugs are very forgiving as most of the action comes from the guy holding the rod. Swimming plugs rely heavily on the design of the plug, and a really bad plug is hard to make work. I don't sell, and I tune those plugs that I will be giving to individuals who don't know how. I find that almost any wooden plug, and many plastic ones, need tuning to get optimum performance. Even soft baits need to be rigged exactingly to get their best performance.

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