A question, probably dumb, but here goes.
I'm lazy, so I'm always trying to find ways to do things quicker, with less steps, when I build lures. That's why I switched to PVC trimboard for most of my building, and Solarez resin as a top coat.
But I built wooden lures for a long time before I was tipped to PVC.
I have built balsa lures in the past, and had success with this method.
Since crazy glue penetrates and hardens balsa so well, has anyone tried running their screw eyes into the balsa to cut the threads into the smaller pilot hole, unscrewing the eyes again, and then putting a drop of crazy glue into the threaded hole, using a really small wire to make sure it gets down into the hole?
I found that it would reinforce the balsa around the screw eye so it is strong enough to prevent pull out.
Then I'd brush some gap filling crazy glue onto the shank and threads of the screw eye and then run it back in, once the glue in the hole had set.
I doubt this will work for muskie and salt water lures, but it worked for me for bass lures.
I never did a pull out test, but I couldn't pull them out by hand.