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Location: ontario | -2 magnum 10 Colorado blades
- 1 .46 dia 12” looped ss wire shaft
- 2 size 6 easy spin clevis .65 dia
will these sizes work together?
..attempting first home made bucktail |
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Posts: 859
Location: MN | Dan111 - 12/22/2017 1:31 PM
-2 magnum 10 Colorado blades
- 1 .46 dia 12” looped ss wire shaft
- 2 size 6 easy spin clevis .65 dia
will these sizes work together?
..attempting first home made bucktail
I mean yes they will fit I'm just don't know about that wire in the long term. It be nice if you used some .51ish wire. Don't get my wrong I love the .45 for smaller blades. |
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Posts: 670
Location: Twin Cities, MN | I would definitely go with .51 for double tens |
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Location: ontario | cool okay , i ended up ordering the .46 and a .50. What would be the negative of using the .46 for mag 10s? |
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Posts: 2275
Location: SE, WI. |
.051 will work, BUT, I think most use .062 I usually use .055, .059, OR .062 .046 , maybe sending a boy to do a Mans Job;) )JD
Edited by jdsplasher 12/22/2017 4:35 PM
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Location: ontario | lol so is the .45 or .50 okay or no? |
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Posts: 1348
Location: Pewaukee, WI | I'd recommend a .051 or .062 looped shaft. Going any lighter will be a pain because you will be constantly trying to straighten a bent shaft (or trying too). It just doesn't have the tensile strength of heavier wire. .O62 has the advantage of not bending easily, but it also deadens the sound or vibration that the blades give off plus if you do happen to bend it, it's not easily bent back into shape. That's why I favor .051 wire. It's pretty durable and yet if it is bent it can easily be bent back into shape. Another plus is that gauge of wire is
flexible enough to give off a lot of vibration. I don't think you'll be disappointed if you try it.
Edited by bigbite 12/22/2017 8:00 PM
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Posts: 298
| Dan111 - 12/22/2017 4:32 PM
lol so is the .45 or .50 okay or no?
My experience with making DBL 10's:
.051 gets beat up from daily casting and caught fish. Usually fixable and strong enough to stand up to the abuse.
045 will get bent up and twisted a whole lot more. The excessive bending leads to bad bucktail performance. Blades not spinning and such. It's a lot harder to fix and keep the lure functional. I'd be prepared to replace the wire shaft quite often. It's fine for smaller single treble bucktals with smaller blades.
Edited by Fishboy19 12/26/2017 2:49 PM
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Posts: 2336
Location: Chisholm, MN | I actually like the lighter wire. You get more vibration using it and I haven't had an issue with it kinking or bending bad enough to replace it. |
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| .62 is the way to go .anything smaller is not good,it bent just by the look of a musky |
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Posts: 1760
Location: new richmond, wi. & isle, mn | Kirby Budrow - 12/28/2017 11:18 AM
I actually like the lighter wire. You get more vibration using it and I haven't had an issue with it kinking or bending bad enough to replace it. agreed |
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Posts: 492
Location: Northern Illinois | Just wondering, why do you believe you get more vibration? |
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Posts: 390
| I would definitely use size 8 clevis not 6. Will spin way better. Also use at least 51 or your shaft will flex, we all know that is no good. |
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Posts: 4053
Location: Land of the Musky | If you need 5/0 or 7/0 hooks, 8 or 10 blades and skirts check out site out.
https://tackleindustries.com/product-category/musky-hooks-bucktail-s...
thanks |
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| RLSea - 1/18/2018 8:09 PM
Just wondering, why do you believe you get more vibration?
just a misconception,blades create vibration,wires don't |
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