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earthworm77

looking for a clear fine salt

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I've been using popcorn salt with good results but it definately bleaches the color a bit. I'm looking for a fine flake salt that melts clear orwon't change the coor of my plastic. Someone told me there is a feed salt like this but couldn't give me the complete name. Anyone have a salt I should check into and where to get it?

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Salt is salt is salt. Just find the purest salt you can. I've been using salt for a water softner it's 99.8 % pure. Just pass it through the grinder to get it to the texture you want.(powder or grains).

No matter how pure the salt is it will always turn the baits"frosty". You just can't get away from it. You may have to increase the amount of color to get the shade you want.

You will never get the bait crystal clear with salt added in the plastic. The more salt the more frosty it will get. 8O

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The best baits I have ever seen are handpours, that's what inspired me. I thought I could make better baits and it would make me more apart of fishing, I was right on both accounts. When I design a bait I think first on a handpour level, then a injection level. I'm not good enough to mass produce my baits (which kick butt) to make a business out of it. If I only pour baits for me and friends, well that's ok, but I still hope for a injected level. Making baits is all I think about.

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What would it cost to get into injection molding? I think I saw the centrifugal spinner for like 12K. Also can you duplicate hand poured colors with it? I've never seen a green weenie chart tail Zoom bait, so I imagine you can't. I'd be interested though in learning more about it. I guess it is more for a business operation rather than a guy who pours for recreation.

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Well from what I know a injection mold could run around 5 to 6k and then have someone else shoot the plastic. The first production run could cost (depending on the number of colors) around 4 to 5k. This is one style of bait in one size, so you got to make it a good one, but if you have a good outlet then you can sell a lot of baits. From what I've read this is what Gary Y did.

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Grinding any salt is going to make the bait milky. By grinding you are adding millions of additional facets, fractures, imperfections, etc... to make the salt crystals opaque/white. Unfortunately in order to make it feasible to get the salt to suspend in the bait it has to be broken down into smaller pieces or a more involved stir method needs to be employed. Most manufactuers don't grind their salt anywhere as fine as many try most seem to use much larger salt. I wonder what the average size of the salt crystals used by most manufactuers?

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It all depends on how fast you want the bait to sink. 30 to 50%. You have to play around a little. The more salt you use the more you have to stir between pours.

Also the temp of the water will play a part. The colder the water the denser it is and the bait will sink slower.

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