Used to boil the tails of plastic worms to make them more flexible. You had to coat them with an oil afterwards or they would stick together
I’m sure this has been asked before but I’ve got several baits that are bent and I was thinking about dropping them in hot water in an attempt to straighten them out. Anyone ever do this? Any tips? I was thinking about laying them out on a paper towel on a pan after warming them up.
Used to boil the tails of plastic worms to make them more flexible. You had to coat them with an oil afterwards or they would stick together
The love for fishing is one of the best gifts you can pass along
I would do light heat, maybe a hair dryer or something and see how that goes. I have done it with fishing line and weed eater cord and it worked okay.
shipahoy41 thanked you for this post
Richard Gene !
uses a cigarette lighter and barely heats it and straightens it right out with hand
Too blessed to be stressed!
You can dip them in boiling water & straighten them right out.
I have used the hair dryer trick a few times. It worked.
Mike
Aquatic Species Removal Engineer.
May God be with you. Keep CALM and STAY ANCHORED with your faith.
We always dipped our old mr twisters. Water just under boiling for about 2 minutes then lay on a towel so they are flat and how you want them to be. For best results let them sit like this for a day. They will soften up nicely and retain whatever shape you lay them down as.
We used to do it with flukes for bass fishing too, gave them a crazy good action and removed all the bent tails that caused them to spiral.
Sent from my SM-A516U using Crappie.com mobile app
shipahoy41 LIKED above post
You can also just add salt to keep them "lubed up" I salt most of my baits these days right after i buy them, dont know if it helps with scent but it sure makes life easier. Way easier to just wipe the salt off your hands than that stinky oil.
Sent from my SM-A516U using Crappie.com mobile app
shipahoy41 LIKED above post
If you use salt and leave them in storage over a period of time it will rot your plastic as you probably know salt is deadly on metal like fish hooks. I suggest the following if you’re going to use salt on your plastic put them in a plastic bag and keep them like that in your containers like a Ziploc bag.
Rot my plastic? Not sure what you mean there.
I have baits in bags and in Plano boxes that have been there (salted) for almost 10 years at this point without any issues. I use non iodized salt. I salt all my bobby garland baits right as i take them off the bait wall, I don't like how sticky they are in the bags.
Sent from my SM-A516U using Crappie.com mobile app