Pond Boss
Late last year a pickerel bit of the tail of my Mr Twister 3" soft plastic grub. I was too lazy to change lures so I cast the grub body minus the tail. Man did it catch fish!! The small bass shown was the first fish I caught with the pick-modified lure. From that day on, I caught over 40 fish on similar designs.

Try this yourself:
1. remove the tail from a grub
2. rig it on a 1/32 oz jig head
3. make sure the line diameter is 4-6 lb test (I use only braid) for best lure action and light strike detection
4. use the rod tip and slight turns of the reel handle to give it action.
5. use a light-action rod and spinning or spincast reel

A child can catch fish on this simple design.

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Sam,
You need to add the [\img] at the end of the last two pictures and then they will embed in your post.

I love the pictures and your creativity. It gives all of us ideas of how to make our own combinations. How do you get the 2 two small rubber bodies to stick together? Would a heat gun work? Does hot glue stick to these rubber bodies?
Try this method to permanently attach parts of soft plastic lures. Super glue not recommended!
After the lure ends are melted together, I use a battery-powered soldering iron to smooth and strengthen the seam. No matter how many fish are caught on the Frankensteined lure, the parts are bonded.
(BTW, someone used the term Frankensteining lures on a different forum because he knew my name - Frank. Wisea.. )

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sorry, I think the img part has to be in all caps. Now the top pictures disappeared too. Sorry if I messed you up. Probably a moderator could help fix it.

Thanks for the information though it is very helpful
Here you go... no need for uppercase on the image tags BTW



Sam, I don't know what you have got going on, but your obviously catching fish with your Franken-lures.

I am having difficulty understanding the neon green lure and how it is rigged to the jig head. I hate to stress you with another photo request as all forums seem to have their nuances when it come to posting pics, but an explanation of how the green grubs fused at the ends is hooked by the jig hook would be interesting.
QA,
I believe he's got it rigged wacky style thru the middle of the grub. Equal lengths floating on each side of the hook shank.
Never heard of "wacky style". I had to look it up on utube...looks promising. Thx Mike.
Killer rig with a Senko! I use a rubber O ring pushed down over it to where I want the hook to be and slip the hook between the lure and O ring, instead of thru the lure so the bait lasts a lot longer. The senko is loaded with salt and is heavy enough to cast w/o weight and it sinks slowly. Fish it like you would a jerk bait. If you have a lot of grass, use a weedless hook to twitch it thru the cover....and hang on!!
What Mike W said...
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strange that about 1 out of 4 of your pictures embed in the link and the others do not. Anyone know why?
It appears to be caused by the question mark & number at the end of the url. All the ones that display do not have that.
One more for you to fix in your first post SAM, top post in this thread, the first picture is not fixed yet. Thanks Tom for your help!
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Reaction lure Company, one of my sponsors when I fished pro had a soft plastic called a icycle. About 4 inch long. Shaped like a pool cue stick. I fish it on the back of a beetle spin and my lmb can't stay away from it!! Also Quarter Acre ...wacky worm fishing was a old guides trick from all the way back in the 1960's on Toledo Bend Reservoir here in east Texas and west Louisiana. It was a well kept secret for many years. In the 80's everyone was talking about the "new" wacky style of fishing. I actually helped a hook designer for Mustad hook design the "finacky hook" It had a minute amount of lead molded onto the shank of the hook to help it drop. I always fished it with a 8 inch worm hooked in the middle. Have caught lmb over 11 pounds on that bait!! I'm tellin my age now aren't I...
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Senkosam, The Reaction Lure Company that I spoke of was in Many Louisiana on Toledo Bend Reservoir. Guess they may be totally out of business now. I still have cases of some of their old soft plastics!! Reaction Innovation seems like it is a totally different organization. Though I would think by them using that name that my old company must be out of business. But I must say the Pocket Rocket does look interesting!!
Had a feeling it was a different company.
Good memories to share, Flame. Oddly, I've never had much luck on wacky style worms, probably because I have zero confidence in them & give up after 5 fishless minutes!
Originally Posted By: SENKOSAM


Tails removed and ends held over a candle flame.
Other examples:


I hate to see lures collect dust after years of sitting in a closet, so a few years ago I decided to modify soft plastics lures. Since Most curl tail grubs don't work for me as often as other soft plastics and finesse action lures I've designed, I search for others that work most of the time and on all freshwater fish species.

One lure is capable of catching all sizes of catfish, panfish, bass, pickerel, gold shiners and carp - the more the merrier!

The question was asked about the unnatural green color. Fish aren't bright enough to care as long as the lure moves the right way and is within a certain size range.


Thanks! I'm looking to target CNBG and smaller LMB and this looks like a great idea.

But I've found that fish DO care about lure color at times, for reasons I frankly don't understand. One thing I have experienced: gold colored jigworms get far less LMB action than any other color I've tried, regardless of season or BOW.
Ant...One day on Rayburn with me at the right time and I could make a believer out of ya on the wacky worm!!
The only thing where color matters IMO is contrast to a background, whether sky, sideways in the water column or bottom.
I could show you many pictures of many fish caught on many colors in different waters - many on the same day and in the same water.

Today I poured clear mini-sticks and I guarantee they will catch fish especially now that the water is cooling and getting clearer. That's pretty much the minimum visual contrast needed for a fish to take interest and the lure's action does its stuff.

Each lure I make will work in just a few colors or one color and I don't need to carry more, but lure action and shape are priorities ; color may enhance both.
mini-stick? clear?
Originally Posted By: SENKOSAM
The only thing where color matters IMO is contrast to a background, whether sky, sideways in the water column or bottom.
I could show you many pictures of many fish caught on many colors in different waters - many on the same day and in the same water.

Today I poured clear mini-sticks and I guarantee they will catch fish especially now that the water is cooling and getting clearer. That's pretty much the minimum visual contrast needed for a fish to take interest and the lure's action does its stuff.

Each lure I make will work in just a few colors or one color and I don't need to carry more, but lure action and shape are priorities ; color may enhance both.


Clear lures in clear water makes good sense to me. The fish can sense movement via lateral line, but have a harder time seeing it. Thus, they are probably slower to identify it as a fake. Even if caught, they will likely not condition as rapidly to avoid a lure they never see clearly.
Originally Posted by canyoncreek
mini-stick? clear?

When it comes to clear plastic lures, whether a clear plastic crankbait or soft plastic lure, there is no such thing as no color in water. It's not like looking through a pane of glass which is totally transparent, flat and thin.

Lures are thick, bent and curved resulting in whatever light passing through clear plastic to outline whatever background color is behind, beneath or above them resulting in a three-dimensional colored object fish easily see regardless water clarity. Here are two examples:



Quote
they are probably slower to identify it as a fake.
As regards that statement, I have an opinion many may disagree with. I've caught fish casting pretty much ever lure design ever made and find more every year when I make lures of varied designs. Based on thousands of observations, here is my simple explanation of why fish strike lures:

Fish sense prey and lures. Both must be of a certain size for them to attack. The action of prey is natural and defined for that species; the action nor the appearance of lures need be natural or realistic copies of anything in nature.

But lures must meet certain requirements live prey don't (except size) in order to provoke a fish to strike.Convincing fish that a lure is a real animal is a human assumption why fish strike lures but with many glaring exceptions. Just the variety of lures presented above is enough proof fish don't think but simply react when certain lure parameters are in place.

Coincidental life imitations may happen, but fish simply react because lure size and action, as well as presentation are precise and within a range. When choosing lures, they are my only considerations.
This is a theory anyone can prove for themselves.

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Originally Posted by canyoncreek
mini-stick? clear?

See my above reply for examples of a wacky rig stick, curl tails, thin straight tails and front-rigged mini-sticks/
Originally Posted by Quarter Acre
Sam, I don't know what you have got going on, but your obviously catching fish with your Franken-lures.

I am having difficulty understanding the neon green lure and how it is rigged to the jig head. I hate to stress you with another photo request as all forums seem to have their nuances when it come to posting pics, but an explanation of how the green grubs fused at the ends is hooked by the jig hook would be interesting.

There is a simple way to prevent soft plastics from sliding down jig hooks after fish have been caught. I call it a wire grub-grip . Believe me, once you attach the wire in less than 2 minutes per jig, you'll prefer collarless jigs which damage the lure when changing it. BTW super glue is just a bad to prevent plastics from sliding down.

Very few have used the idea posted on many forums. When in place it, looks like the L-shaped wire stuck in the clear plastic. And NO, the wire never spooks fish and can be used on any size jig.
Step-by-step photos of the process.

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Originally Posted by Quarter Acre
Never heard of "wacky style". I had to look it up on utube...looks promising. Thx Mike.

The Senko - a salted soft plastic - was the first lure wacky rigged because of the softness of the plastic and the weight of the lure. A bare hook is inserted halfway into the body and when cast, allowed to sink to the bottom. The tapered ends of the stick-worm wobble all the way. The Senko is not Texas rigged which would defeat the purpose of the design.

A few years ago I came up with the idea of making micro-stick hybrid shapes and attach them to very light ball-head jigs inserted in the middle.

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Originally Posted by canyoncreek
strange that about 1 out of 4 of your pictures embed in the link and the others do not. Anyone know why?

IMGUR should NOT be the source for photo links. When I add photos to it, it moves all photos down and the links are no longer valid.
Originally Posted by SENKOSAM
Originally Posted by canyoncreek
strange that about 1 out of 4 of your pictures embed in the link and the others do not. Anyone know why?

IMGUR should NOT be the source for photo links. When I add photos to it, it moves all photos down and the links are no longer valid.

I've never had that happen. Lets see if they changed something.

This one was put on imgur about 2 weeks ago.
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

I pasted the above image link in this reply from imgur then went and added the following picture to imgur, grabbed a link and put it here. If what you are saying is correct, then the above picture shouldn't show up?

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
I've lost more IMGUR photos in forum posts than I care to remember. Nice when I can drag jpeg images into posts like on Pondboss. Other forums let you open photos stored on your PC and include them in the post wherever you want them - like in between paragraphs.

The only thing I use IMGUR for is to go to the pages of photos I want to use, save as on my desktop and then transfer them into the post. Saves looking through hundreds of photos on my PC for what I need.
I like the wire idea!!! What's the smallest size jig head that it will work with (weight wise)?
senkosam, can you explain how you drag and drop photos into your posts? I can't do that and we face issues with having to resize photos if we are using the photo upload tool which is very difficult. Are you talking about dragging somehow on a desktop when creating a post? Love to know your tips. I too dislike using photo hosting forums for many reasons, mainly because they have your pictures hostage and also because nothing is truly free, or at least free for very long.
CC: When I use IMGUR's BBC code (copy & paste), the image is full size on PB like this one.
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

I pre-size, add text, auto enhancement and other stuff via Arc Soft Canon Photo Studio 5 Photo Editing. I always check the size of a photo because many times it needs to be reduced by 30 - 60 % to avoid posting too large a picture.

Because of IMGUR storage problem and posting on forums, I'm forced to use the Attachment Manager under post options link.

You drag the photo from your desk top to the box with the down arrow and can add up to ten photos in total at one time. Of course the reader of the post has to tap the photo for visual enlargement and no photo can be inserted just anywhere. All photos are one the bottom of the post.

(BTW, no mold was used to create the lures shown. A shiny floor tile, box cutter blade, microwave, pyrex cup, hot plastisol and Spike-It dye pen produced them - along with a bit of imagination. No fish is immune from their charms.)

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I'd like to see that process. Any chance you would make a video of making your plastics for us to see?
A lighter is difficult to use while trying to slightly melt the two ends to be joined. A candle used to melt one side and then the other allows the ends to be joined and the joined end to cool in less than 4 seconds.

If I don't have a soldering iron handy, I can still use the mod minus smoothing the seam. For large diameters, I roll the seam over the flame to smooth it.

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Originally Posted by catscratch
I'd like to see that process. Any chance you would make a video of making your plastics for us to see?

Some of my best memories as a kid are of pouring worms with my father and brother!

A bass fishing friend in Texas bequeathed my father all of his gear.

There was a melting pot for the plastic base and then we added softener and color. It had a lever type handle on the side, and even 7 y.o. boys could perform a perfect pour. He gave us lots of slightly flexible plastic molds of worms of various lengths and configurations, twin-tailed beetle spin bodies, crayfish, etc. After the plastic cooled, you just flexed the mold and everything came out perfectly!

We would pour the plastic a little tougher in the spring when the bass would attack anything. For summer fishing, we would use very soft pours that might tear after one strong hook set. However, they kept the bass on the lure long enough for youngsters to feel the fish and set the hook.

Great times!

(Actually, typing this up now makes me realize that we were given several hundreds of dollars worth of gear!)
Originally Posted by catscratch
I'd like to see that process. Any chance you would make a video of making your plastics for us to see?

The hybrid method was explained, but I'm not sure if you need a video of how to make the spoonminnow. Anyway:
1. you need plastisol (one qt. will make 1,000 lures)
2. pyrex cup
3. microwave to get the plastic hot - around 200 degrees or liquid enough to pour
4. if you don't have dye colors, Spike It liquid or pens will add color to clear plastic
5. shiny floor tile or other glass surface

1.Heat the plastic (old lures won't cuto it).
2.Tip the glassy surface at a small angle so the pour leaves a thin film
3.Use a blade to cut any shape you want
4.Hold the shape by the tail and dip the part that will be the body and let cool a few seconds.Repeat as many times needed until the body thickness is what you want..
5. dip the lure in Spike-It or other soft plastic lure dye; use the pen to create patterns

Now you have the most fish-catching lure ever made - bar none!!!!! All fish species will strike it and hard! Straight thin-tails have an incredible subtle action that drives fish nuts!

As you can see, with just a little imagination the process can be used to make other shapes that can be added to the bodies of lures you own using the candle to join them.
Originally Posted by SENKOSAM
Originally Posted by catscratch
I'd like to see that process. Any chance you would make a video of making your plastics for us to see?

The hybrid method was explained, but I'm not sure if you need a video of how to make the spoonminnow. Anyway:
1. you need plastisol (one qt. will make 1,000 lures)
2. pyrex cup
3. microwave to get the plastic hot - around 200 degrees or liquid enough to pour
4. if you don't have dye colors, Spike It liquid or pens will add color to clear plastic
5. shiny floor tile or other glass surface

1.Heat the plastic (old lures won't cuto it).
2.Tip the glassy surface at a small angle so the pour leaves a thin film
3.Use a blade to cut any shape you want
4.Hold the shape by the tail and dip the part that will be the body and let cool a few seconds.Repeat as many times needed until the body thickness is what you want..
5. dip the lure in Spike-It or other soft plastic lure dye; use the pen to create patterns

Now you have the most fish-catching lure ever made - bar none!!!!! All fish species will strike it and hard! Straight thin-tails have an incredible subtle action that drives fish nuts!

As you can see, with just a little imagination the process can be used to make other shapes that can be added to the bodies of lures you own using the candle to join them.
Interesting! Thanks for the description. I might or might not fully understand the process, but I think I've got it!
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