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robalo01

Lip/bill Installation

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If your building flat sided cranks it is really personal choice as to when you cut the lip slot. If your building baits with contoured sides then you need to cut the lip slot while the sides are still flat. This will guarantee that the slot is cut square to the blank.

 

Ben

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I always cut the lip slot immediately after cutting out the basic lure shape, while everything is still square.  I install the lips after painting the lure, before putting on the topcoat.  That way, I don't have to tape off the lip before painting.

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I always cut the lip slot immediately after cutting out the basic lure shape, while everything is still square.  I install the lips after painting the lure, before putting on the topcoat.  That way, I don't have to tape off the lip before painting.

 

I do the same, but I install the lips before I paint, and mask them off with blue painters tape.  I always screw up the paint when I try to clean out the slot if I don't.

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I hate taping lips on a new bait before painting so I worked out how to avoid it and still get a clean slot in which to glue the lip after painting.  Before painting, I fit a scrap piece of lip material into the slot, using a little tape if required to get a snug fit.  The scrap piece has a hole drilled in the end and I use locking forceps to hold the baits while painting them, then put a little wire hanger into the drilled hole and hang the baits above my work bench on nails.  When I'm finished painting and glue in the lip, I switch the wire hanger to the belly hanger while the glue hardens.

 

Everybody eventually works out a scheme to suit their work environment and bait building methods, this is just mine.

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Stanford lure has a neat jig for cutting the lip slots after the paint. I think it is one of the last steps.

 

The thing about jigs is that they are great when what your putting into the jig is the exact same size and shape every time. When your cutting lure shapes out by hand there are small discrepancies in size and shape so your jig may, or may not, fit each bait properly. If the jig doesn't fit each bait the same way your going to have differences in the finished product.

 

From what I've read about Stanford they probably have a duplicating machine so their lure bodies all come out the same. This would allow the use of jigs for such things as lip slots, hook hangers, etc.

 

just my :twocents:

 

Ben

Edited by RayburnGuy
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