Muskie Discussion Forums
| ||
| Moderators: Slamr | View previous thread :: View next thread |
| Jump to page : 1 2 Now viewing page 1 [30 messages per page] Muskie Fishing -> General Discussion -> Snaps, Split Rings and the Super Snap |
| Message Subject: Snaps, Split Rings and the Super Snap | |||
| Kazmuskie |
| ||
Posts: 194 | I was hoping to respond in a positive manor to the frozen "Broken Snap" thread. I would like to offer a possible solution or two. First off, I prefer to use a split ring instead of a snap. I put one on every bait so they don't have to be pried open quite as far every time I decide to change lures. You'll see what I mean if you try to keep your split ring on your leader (the wire on a leader is much thinner then the eyelet on your bait). I haven't caught enough fish to proclaim, from my experiences, that this will never fail, but I know a couple guides from Hayward who swear by this technique. One of which puts around 175 fish in his boat every year. I realize this can get a little pricey, especially if you have a ton of baits, but it's worth it IMO. I prefer to use the larger size Bucher split rings (#7 size?). They seem to hold their shape the best. I have a ton of the older olive green ones, but I think they quit making them because the process was a real nasty chemical reaction that turned them that color. I believe they are now stainless steel. I haven't tried the SS ones yet, but I bet they work just as well. The next best option is to get a few "Super Snaps". These are hand tied snaps from American Hardwood Lures. They use wire so thick you can barely get one open on purpose, let alone have any fish open one on you. I tie them into my home-made Quick-set rigs, but they would work great in place of split rings if you must use a snap. These snaps are available at www.musky-lures.com and I think they cost around $3-4 each. If a guy bought three or four and some leader wire, they could be tied up over and over as the leader wire gets worn. Remember to change your leader wire from time to time as this will wear out too. I realize $3-4 is a lot to pay for a single snap, but I would look at it as insurance. How much would it cost to replace your favorite lure if you lost it to snap failure. Plus it might just save a fish from a slow death due to a big ole bait stuck in its face. | ||
| Grunt Lures |
| ||
Posts: 786 Location: Minnesota | RE: Don't buy cheap snaps! I agree Hulbert. I went with cheaper 65lb PowerPro and I wish I had gone with 100lb for just a few more bucks. Lost a Cowgirl and a big Bull Dawg this year. Cost me a LOT more than the few bucks to just buy the 100lb line over the 65lb line. As for my reels, still working on that one | ||
| The Yeti |
| ||
| it's actually not hard to use the 500 lb wire from stamina and make your own stayloc type snaps. i've been doing it for the last year. they work fine, no problems. if you can make leaders, you can make snaps. | |||
| Schuler |
| ||
Posts: 1462 Location: Davenport, IA | I had been using #4 stringease stay-loc snaps but had one break in the net recently...along with a bucher spring ring (on a differant fish) But I don't worry about it too much. Fish can't twist like that on the way in. I used to put snaps on all the lures but it was a PITA IMO. I use #6 coastloc snaps now (never had one open) | ||
| muskihntr |
| ||
Posts: 2037 Location: lansing, il | i have found the #5 stringease snaps to be the best out there, i use those mainly on our stealth leaders, i get alot of requests for #4 snaps which i do carry and put on upon request but i would recommend sticking with the #5s i also use solid rings on the fluoro leaders so you can split ring direct to a bait! quality hardware is the only way to go!!! from the looks in that picture of the broken snap it appears to me it should have been switched out way before it broke! either way you should keep a close eye on your snaps and change them out when they feel they are getting easier to close or the paint wearing off. | ||
| Beaver |
| ||
| Don't use snaps. Buy good split rings and a coil of wire, and use a split ring on the nose of every lure. Make your own leaders with a solid ring on one side and a loop in the wire on the other. For bucktails, use a ballbearing swivel on one end and a loop on the other and add a splitring to the bucktail. I've had the best snaps open, but never had a splitring open. Beav | |||
| esoxaddict |
| ||
Posts: 8856 | Since I was the one who posted the original thread I may as well tell the rest of the story... As most of you know I spend a considerable amount of time here on the musky forums. I've read all the tackle related topics with great interest, and I've made it a point to always have what I consider to be the best quality equipment, line, and terminal tackle. I go overboard -- checking my line every time out, re-tie after every fish, retie after every day on the water. I normally use the 150# stringease leaders with the 400# wire. I run bronzeback and spectron on all my reels. I flip the line once and toss it after season #2. I've even switched to 130# line on a couple reels. Remember the thread about split rings straightening out on bulldawgs? I changed 'em ALL after that, 56 split rings on 27 bulldawgs, because one or two guys had them straighten out... I am about as anal as you can get when it comes to that stuff, I even glue my knots. Fast forward to last Friday: Rigging up a sucker with a stay lok snap when you're wearing gloves can get pretty irritating, right? So I grabbed the "other" snap... It had been laying around since before I discovered stay-loks, back when I thought a snap was a snap. "It's never been used, It won't break. It may wear out sooner, but these are so much easier to get the rubber band on and easier to close. May as well use it a couple times before I throw it out. What are the chances it will break?" So round about 4:00 I hear that sound "Bbzbzzt!!" Grab the sucker rod, thumb the spool... Ooooh, I think that's a fish!! I hand the rod to my buddy and I say "Hey, check it out, that's a fish ain't it" Having only sucker fished a handful of times I wanted to be absolutely sure, as we were down to one sucker. He agrees, it's a fish! I take the rod back, and reel down to the water. Ooooh, here we go! I'm jumpin out of my skin, man!! *WHAM!* I hit that ###### with everything I had! and NOTHING... What the $%&*? How could I miss that fish? Then I reeled up the line to find no sucker, no rig, and a snap that was straigtened out like a paper clip. So not only did I lose the sucker and the rig, I probably killed that fish. Nice way to end the season, huh? "I'll just use this snap a couple times and THEN throw it out. It won't break..." All the cheap snaps and swivels went in the garbage. So did the leaders with paint worn off. I know a lot of you guys are on tight budgets. I am too. I get stupid buying musky stuff, I have a bunch of stuff I don't need that I shouldn't have bought. But after what happened Friday? I'd rather sell my favorite baits and buy #5 stay lok snaps, or buy #7 Bucher rings and split ring all my baits. That could have been my personal best. I could have been someone else's fish of a lifetime. It will probably wind up being a tasty meal for turtles and crayfish now, all because I decided to use a snap I probably spend a dollar on instead of throwing it out. Like I said yesterday: DON'T buy cheap snaps! | ||
| BNelson |
| ||
Location: Contrarian Island | I agree with John, the #5's he uses on his leaders are very strong..should they be switched out after alot of use ..yes I think so... for piece of mind I use split rings on most of my leaders..bucher #7's... use good line, good components on your leaders and always switch out weak split rings that hang the hooks..there are alot of manufacturers using very weak stuff..... Edited by MSKY HNR 11/28/2006 10:14 AM | ||
| esoxaddict |
| ||
Posts: 8856 | LOL John's leaders are why I switched to a cheap snap! Bette, it's all your fault | ||
| jonnysled |
| ||
Posts: 13688 Location: minocqua, wi. | my guess here is that mike and brad put enough of a test on terminal tackle to deliver a pretty good percentage of failure and recommendation for what to use if you have a question. will be fun to watch this one grow into nebulon again. | ||
| esoxaddict |
| ||
Posts: 8856 | Just to clarify -- I'm not questioning the integrity of John's leaders! I have full confidence in their ability to withstand anyhting a fish can throw at them. But the #5 stay-lok snaps are a real bear to fasten when they are fresh out of the package, you're wearing gloves, and you're fighing with a sucker that's trying to get away. Proving once again that being lazy doesn't get you very far. | ||
| jonnysled |
| ||
Posts: 13688 Location: minocqua, wi. | "because they are a bear to fasten when NEW" .... EXACTLY!! ... take your gloves off. there are many different ways to rig the sucker to make it easier, quicker and safer depending on what type of rig you fish with too. i use a rubber band lift-off, and put the rubber band in the nose first ... attache the hooks to the sucker second and put the split ring from the rig into the snap last .... fasten it with my hands holding the face of the sucker ... a couple minutes max, fish is rigged and swimming ... hooks are never dangling anywhere anytime. | ||
| esoxaddict |
| ||
Posts: 8856 | Sled... I don't care about how difficult it is to rig a sucker, I just want the little bugger to stay attached when I set the hook like a gorilla! I knew better, and I used it anyway... Cheap stuff breaks. I proved that. So I quit using cheap stuff. My hope is that someone else here will do the same before they learn the hard way. | ||
| The Yeti |
| ||
| Jeff like i said i know you're a tinkerer (and guitar player by nature), so i'll take it as you being as anal as I am, and as obsessive about certain things as i am. buy a coil of the 500 lb wire from stamina. http://staminainc.com/wireforms/leader_wire/steelwire.html i think it's about 30 feet of wire. MAKE your own staylocks over the winter...you won't regret it. the great thing about it is, you can make different sizes and it only takes about 10 minutes with: a pair of forceps wire pliers (the round ones) a dubrows leader maker will get you nice tight twists, but once u start doing it, you can get them just as tight with the round pliers i've broken every size NEW staylock this year (backlash with a weagle, snagged DR and believe it or not a small one broke the first time i opened it to put a rattle trap on my dad's rig)....last year, i used the same LARGE one for 3 months (ignorance) and its still intact. go figure. i love those snaps, i really do..the design is ingenious...but now, i like mine better for the bigger baits and bigger applications that i can use them on....(esp. trolling). you can customize them too (deeper loops for more action, tighter arm and 3/4 circle armhang ... if you are going to use them....i'd personally recommend using the biggest staylock they make. thicker wire being the reason and they're easier to manipulate. that sux to hear about the fish, it really does. | |||
| Jerry Newman |
| ||
Location: 31 | You guys who make your own leaders and prefer snaps over split rings should strongly consider making your own snaps like Yeti says. I've been making my version of the Sampo snap for longer than I've been fishing the Ottawa (12 years) without one breakage... and I don't hesitate to reuse them. I used the cross locks before and had problems because the wire Berkley uses is so brittle and cheap. It's not just how heavy the wire is, it's the quality and how it's tempered. I use the 360lb .043 bronze with a longer tag end... maybe 3/16" or so, you could also easily copy any snap out there. I'd be happy to send one of my snaps to anyone interested in making their own if you drop me your address. My little Merry Christmas to you:) [email protected] | ||
| jonnysled |
| ||
Posts: 13688 Location: minocqua, wi. | can you guys post a picture of them? | ||
| Ranger |
| ||
Posts: 3918 | Yea, how do you make them snaps? Can you post a pic and give a step by step? | ||
| Jerry Newman |
| ||
| I could "try" to post a picture later on or just send you one to copy... or just pick up one of your Bass pro fishing catalog and check out the Sampo snap picture The tag end I was referring to is the end you thread threw the eye of your bait. Specifically, it's the end of the loop you hook directly to the wire. The tag end loop on the factory Sampo snaps are only about 1/8" long and the ones I make out of better wire are 3/16"... maybe even a 1/4" depending on how you measure it. The beauty of adding that extra length is it takes 2 thumbs and a twist to open and does not interfere with changing baits quickly, unless you still use the small bass size screw eyes. I've seen the split rings method "work off" the wire while using gliders and these snaps with the longer tag end "could" be opened up if a fish hits it just right I guess. Nothing in this world is 100% fool proof, but these snaps are the best I could come up with. I showed a lure maker friend of mind the snap and he started making them for sale ($1 each) on his web site. http://www.musky-lures.com/ I personally think he made them too big and heavy duty, if your using big baits or need a snap for your mast planer boards | |||
| esoxaddict |
| ||
Posts: 8856 | Sled, that's a really good idea! I'm going to try that and see how it goes. Thanks, man. | ||
| Jerry Newman |
| ||
| HA! I was going back and reading the entire thread and noticed Kasmuskie first post also mentioned AHW's (Mick's) web site with the "snaps that can be handed down to your grandchildren" ... guess it's a small muskie world. While we're on the subject of leaders... Something else I do a little different while making solid wire leaders is a drop of nail polish on the wire leader wrap itself at the BB swivel end. I've noticed a problem while casting (mainly jigs and gliders) when the line itself becomes wrapped around the leader and rubs against the exposed sharp end of the wire. A drop of nail polish not only prevents premature line wear it also helps keep the line from staying wrapped around the leader in the first place. You can also use different colored nail polish for different size leaders to easily tell them apart. While we're on the subject of jigs... I make an attached solid wire leader to every jig without a snap mainly because the snap is usually too big to get threw the jigs attachment eye, plus the snap now becomes a collection point for that crummy bottom goop. So I just attach the leader wire directly to the jig, a real neat trick is to leave the end of the wire with a 1/2" tag end and bend it toward the jig like a brush guard, this works like a charm to keep stuff from gathering on the jig head. "My hope is that someone else here will do the same before they learn the hard way." Agreed... | |||
| BALDY |
| ||
Posts: 2378 | Ranger - 11/29/2006 1:04 AM Yea, how do you make them snaps? Can you post a pic and give a step by step? Its really easy. If you can make a leader, you can make a snap. Just take a look at any commercial snap, and you should be able to see the sequence of bends required to get what you are looking for. I'll try to take some pics tonight and post them for you to take a look at. | ||
| muskyboy |
| ||
| Stay Loc #5 Snaps, and Bucher #7 Split Rings for me, nothing less. Your terminal tackle is the weakest link in your system given the strength of today's superbraids, so don't short cut using cheap hooks, snaps, or split rings. I watched my friend loose the fish of a lifetime because of a cheap hook, and that leason really proved the point for me. | |||
| BALDY |
| ||
Posts: 2378 | pictures of the process this one is a little bigger than normal and not proportioned right, but it should help show the steps required. made from .051" wire Attachments ---------------- IMG_1858.JPG (40KB - 217 downloads) IMG_1859.JPG (19KB - 226 downloads) IMG_1860.JPG (24KB - 211 downloads) IMG_1861.JPG (34KB - 260 downloads) IMG_1862.JPG (18KB - 226 downloads) IMG_1863.JPG (22KB - 229 downloads) | ||
| ToddM |
| ||
Posts: 20269 Location: oswego, il | I have made my own snaps like baldy has shown there as well using 360lb leader material. Only difference is, I make my loop push against the wire to keep it from opening instead of being in the middle of the end that hooks. | ||
| Kazmuskie |
| ||
Posts: 194 | Jerry, that kills me. I was reading your post about how you showed your Lure making buddy. Classic. Those snaps are the bomb. I thought they were a bit pricier, but I never paid for any either. Small world indeed. If you're ever in Madison, look me up. Phil can get you my digits. | ||
| Jerry Newman |
| ||
Location: 31 | After the realization came over me that it was AHL's super snap I just cracked up too. I've been fishing with Mic for over 20 years - great guy and an even better fisherman. I'll forward a link to Mick and get your number, any friend of his is a friend of mine. I think Baldy's .051 and Todd's .043 size is the best all around gauge wire to use, I also like that design too. I honestly think any of the common designs made with good quality SS wire are going to be light years ahead of the same in store bought. Like I also said, I think Mick's are too heavy for the average guy to make and not matched well for smaller baits... but you could pull your truck out of the ditch with one too eh' Attachments ---------------- snaps.JPG (76KB - 200 downloads) | ||
| Jerry Newman |
| ||
Location: 31 | OK, that was my first ever attempt at posting a picture, just wanted to make sure first... oh yeah! The 2 big snaps are the AHL Super snaps with long tag ends. The 2 at the bottom and 1 at the top in the pliers are the ones I make out of .043, I set the one in the pliers so you could clearly see the shadow of the longer tag end. I also stuck the swivel end of one of my leaders with the nail polish so you could see that deal too. A picture is worth a 1000 words... The other snaps are some store bought I had laying around for comparison, you could also make the little arm guard deal if your concerned about them opening up. | ||
| Grunt Lures |
| ||
Posts: 786 Location: Minnesota | Can you guys post a picture of the bender you use? Or post if it was needle nose pliars? TIA, James | ||
| Kazmuskie |
| ||
Posts: 194 | The super snap is $1. I screwed that up earlier. They are available at www.musky-lures.com Or you might be able to find Mick (Phil Drury) at some of the fishing shows this winter. | ||
| BALDY |
| ||
Posts: 2378 | Grunt Lures - 11/30/2006 6:10 AM Can you guys post a picture of the bender you use? Or post if it was needle nose pliars? TIA, James I made the whole thing with a round nose pliers. A Boggs would work well also | ||
| Jump to page : 1 2 Now viewing page 1 [30 messages per page] |
| Search this forum Printer friendly version E-mail a link to this thread |


Copyright © 2026 OutdoorsFIRST Media |