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The Jig Is Up

Slow Falling Micro Jig

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Hello all,

I am trying to build a very specific kind of jig, to suit the kind of fishing that I do in my region.

To be specific, I'd like to build a weedless micro jig that has an extremely slow rate of fall, like you'd see with a 1/16 oz weedless ballhead jig with a finesse TRD trailer on it.

I like the rate of fall that said 1/16 oz ballhead jig has, but I want a jig that is more suited to come through grass. The 90-degree eye of my ballhead jig snags grass a little too easily.

To be candid, I would go with the Snootie Jig hands-down, since it goes through grass so well. However, that jig only goes down to 1/8 oz, so I'm not sure if it would fall slow enough for what I'm looking for.

Any ideas for a weedless jig that fits those requirements?

I have been brainstorming this jig for some time, and have yet to find one that exactly ticks all the right boxes.

Thank you!

Edited by The Jig Is Up
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Pour the 1/8 oz Snootie jig in tin. More than a third less weight than lead.

 

Lead 11.342 grams per cubic centimeter

Bismuth 9.87 grams per cubic centimeter

Pewter 8.5-9.5 grams per cubic centimeter

Tin 7.265 grams per cubic centimeter

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Posted (edited)

@cadmanThose are both amazing suggestions. I have never poured with tin before... I assume that requires a dedicated hot pot... I may have to give that a try.

The Bat Jig is another incredible suggestion. That jig does not come with any kind of weedguard, but I think tying a wire weedguard in would be fairly trivial to do.

The Do-It Walleye Head Jig (WHJ-7-AR) is kind of in the same boat - no weedguard slot, but it has a nice streamlined design and goes down to 1/16 oz.

Edited by The Jig Is Up
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It’s easy to make a weedguard slot.  All you have to do is cut a piece of wire just bigger than the weedguard, tape it in place, put the mold. In a vice and tighten it down.  I have several molds modified this way using Sevalon or Surflon wire in 25, 60 and 90#.

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1 hour ago, The Jig Is Up said:

@cadmanThose are both amazing suggestions. I have never poured with tin before... I assume that requires a dedicated hot pot... I may have to give that a try.

The Bat Jig is another incredible suggestion. That jig does not come with any kind of weedguard, but I think tying a wire weedguard in would be fairly trivial to do.

The Do-It Walleye Head Jig (WHJ-7-AR) is kind of in the same boat - no weedguard slot, but it has a nice streamlined design and goes down to 1/16 oz.

On the bismuth or tin, all you have to do is empty your current pot of  lead and put in the tin or bismuth. If you are going to do a couple of jigs for samples, take an old tablespoon or a small ladle, put a small chunk of tin, and heat the spoon/ladle with a torch and pour it into a hot mold. You can heat the cavity of the mold with a torch to to warm it up as well. Tin has a low melting point about 425 degrees lower than lead. I don't know how strong it is though. Bismuth is very hard, as I have poured bismuth jigs for the guys in Massachusetts. On the jigs, the walleye jig has a 90 degree hook, so I don't know if that is an issue for you. The other two are 60 degree hooks. You can incorporate a weedguard slot like Jig Man mentioned it is not complicated.

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