Most durable painted blades?
kyleharty
Posted 12/2/2010 12:13 AM (#468780)
Subject: Most durable painted blades?




Posts: 56


Location: Southern MN
I've just started making my own spinners and replaced the blades on a pink Blue Fox Super Vibrax that had most of the pink paint come off after little use.

I picked up some Lakeland blades and rebuilt the spinner. I dropped it in the water with the new blades (testing along with a few new ones I'd made) and the paint on the back of the blades instantly flaked off. I didn't even cast it, just free spooled it into the water and there was a cloud of paint chips. Maybe this was just a bad batch as the guy at Thorne Bros. had no reservations about the Lakelands but I'm a little leery of building any more baits with these blades over the winter without some feedback or recommendations.

What blades would you guys recommend that have a durable painted finish? Thanks!
h2os2t
Posted 12/2/2010 6:49 AM (#468785 - in reply to #468780)
Subject: RE: Most durable painted blades?




Posts: 941


Location: Freedom, WI
A friend of mine builds tails and he told me Lakeland did have a bad batch.
nalod
Posted 12/2/2010 8:57 AM (#468796 - in reply to #468780)
Subject: Re: Most durable painted blades?




Posts: 41


I buy a bunch of bucktails from a local person that only uses blades from Dutch Fork Custom Lures (http://www.custompaintalure.com/). The paint jobs are always amazing and really hold up well.

--Joe
DIZZYHORSE
Posted 12/2/2010 9:27 AM (#468797 - in reply to #468780)
Subject: Re: Most durable painted blades?




Posts: 114


Location: Central Wisconsin
I think the blade colors are just for fisherman. Some on my best buck tails are the ones that look like a shredded pop can at the end of the season, no paint on the blades and 1/2 the skirting gone, it seems the worse they get the more fish they catch. I'm a firm believer that muskies eat spinners because of the vibration / speed, because they look nothing like a bluegill or a walleye. With that being said, if you're selling them you do need good paint!!!
kyleharty
Posted 12/2/2010 11:59 PM (#468863 - in reply to #468780)
Subject: Re: Most durable painted blades?




Posts: 56


Location: Southern MN
Thanks for the replies, these must've been part of that bad batch. I've had a few painted spinner blades and a MI chatterbait blade that haven't held up well in the past but nothing like those. The other pair of blades I got seem much better.

DIZZYHORSE, I agree with you the majority of the time, the color is usually a lesser factor than vibration and speed. I've got one DCG that's been hit way more than any other; I wouldn't be surprised if there was something just a little different in the vibration of that bait from being bent and mangled over and over that triggers fish better than an out of the box spinner.