Westy Posted February 15, 2007 Report Share Posted February 15, 2007 I posted this on another site but I hope I can get some help. About a year ago I thought I would switch up the gliders I make from basswood to maple. However no matter what I did then every lure I made in maple would balance well but the minute I got it in the water and started to tap it to get into rhythm it would just come straight at me - kind of like having a 8" Rattle Trap . So I shelved that project. Over the last couple of days I thought I would give it another shot with a different bait design I was working on. Same deal - the bait balances perfectly but when I take it out in the water to test it has no action at all. Are there tricks to working with maple that I wouldn't know since I have generally worked with basswood or cedar in the past? Any advice would be appreciated - here's a pic and some stats: Bait is 8" long with two lead holes and is made of 3/4" maple. The bait comes with three Mustad 3/0 trebles. First hook is located 1 5/8" from nose of the bait, second is 3" from rear of the bait, and last hook is in the tail; First lead hole is 7/16" wide, 1" deep, and is located 2" from the nose of the bait. Second lead hole is 7/16" wide, 5/8" deep and is located 2" from the rear of the bait. Shane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jerkbait Posted February 16, 2007 Report Share Posted February 16, 2007 Had the same problem with dense woods. Move your weights out to the extreme ends of the bait and try it. Fixed the problem for me on a divani style glider that I make. I even had to start casting larger diameter and thus shorter lead cylinders to get it as close to the tail as I wanted. Hope it helps. Riverman was the one who clued me to it. Jerk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mark berrisford Posted February 16, 2007 Report Share Posted February 16, 2007 being from europe i can't give you any tip's on which wood to try i've found lighter wood produces a nice lively bait but it can be a pain to weight due to the amount of lead needed and dense wood is easy to weight but it produces a stunted action so for your long term sanity i'd get another wood Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...