![]() With air inject w/wo floats, I can crawl or stall a bouncer rig w/less fear of snags (single hook easier). Mono breaks with snags (or straighten hooks)& I won't lose rest of rig. I only see pre-made wire rigs around erie. Wire vs mono - with wire, the rig last forever if you don't get snagged. #4 is where we start.Ĭan't comment on fluorocarbon. Blade color and harness length can be just as important. Simple differences such as hammered vs plain or plain vs prism tape and blade size, type can all be huge. ![]() Bud used hatchets one year & they caught fish. I've seen smilie blades do very well inland and west erie. Willows will create the least drag at higher speeds. W/right clevis, small spin easier than big. Same w/inland eyes but saugeye's sometimes like it faster.īlade spin - easiest to hardest - Macks/smilies, colorado, indiana, willow. Catch good fish with Colorados/indianas at speeds up to 2.4 or so on erie but usually stay between 1.3 to 1.8. I've never given willows a chance except further east. In the western basin, everything same except blade type, the fish often clearly favor either indiana or colorado. Didn't try willows until 10 yrs later in central/east-central erie. Indiana blades - I fully appreciate the "splitting hairs" comment in a prev post (you gotta stop somewhere) but I started out with indiana's and colorado's inland and west erie. I'm going to try to touch on a few things:
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