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mark poulson

Soft, Strong Plastic

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You could use smooth-on Ecoflex silicone shore 00-30 (plastisol medium) or shore 00-20 (plastisol soft). Down side is cost and cure time. They have a paint that will work.

What is the material your molds are made of? If your molds are silicone they must be platinum silicone or the Ecoflex will not cure.

Edited by djs
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Try some of the Caney Creek Molds High Density Additive. Not only can you make a bait with the same sink rate as a salted bait...but they are significantly more durable!I use 2 tablespoons in 4oz of plastic. Stir it into cold plastic (that's important).

I've caught over a dozen bass on one wacky worm made from HD additive.

The additive does not seem to negatively affect the action of the bait .I made a bunch of swim tail worms with it and both myself and my buddy couldn't see any difference....he was the "blind" test..he didn't know which one was the HD and which was standard (medium) Caney Creek plastic.

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Yes. I personally have changed to Caney Creek plastic. I only pour for myself, my son and my mooching buddies and it's the easiest to work with in my opinion.

Yes, Caney Creek sells softener...but the medium works for me for all my bass baits...including small crappie baits.

I have been fooling around with pouring the tail section on some baits with softener in them...then pouring the bodies with the HD so they are tough....Works great when you want a two color bait anyway! It's also kind of a cool way to do worms....the tail floats...and the head sinks...rigged Texas rig minus the bullet sinker...or a shaky ...without the lead head! The "no lead shaky" worked really well on Largemouth last weekend in our cold water (iced over now!)....nice and slow...a drove them crazy! Plus I didn't get hung up in the branches on the bottom even once with the hook texas rigged.

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Check out Bill's post on the CCM forum where he did some fantastic analysis of the density of 2 tablespoons/4oz and how that compares to a standard Senko. REALLY good info...and that's why I mix 2 tablespoon/4oz as my "standard" worm.

FYI...you'll need to 2x (at least) your colorant to offset the gray color of the additive.

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