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No Topcoat On Plastics

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Most of the paint schemes we do are fragile.  They do not have long chain polymers to provide a strong, protective top coat.

So we do top coat our lures.

If you use either rattle can paints, or lacquers, you can probably skip the top coat, but the paint will get thrashed just from the bait being cast and retrieved.  Hook rash is an ugly thing.

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when I have a lure that is plastic and I don't want to mess with topcoats, ill go buy some road marking spraypaint that's not water soluble, or put clear rattle can laquer stuff on top that is not water soluble either. It is fairly hard to get off and is quick and easy,

it works great for those lures you really don't care much about because their either going to get lost or torn up very fast. if your wanting quick and easy, this is the way to go.

 

P.S. the road marking paint also works on spinnerblades

Edited by jonister
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Thanks for the additional input guys. I'm shore fishing and one of the shorelines I fish is really rocky with some sunken wood and lots of idiot mono out there. I've only lost a couple of spinners so far but wanted quick&dirty paint jobs to try.

 

As a side note last year I saw two young guys lose nearly a dozen Rapala Husky Jerks in a morning's time. 

 

bill

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