
The Spinner Bait gets and Upgrade
![]()
|
"Made for FISH"
While the safety pin spinner bait has been in use for over 30 years it has had the same basic design since the first one came out. Punisher Lures has found a way to improve the spinner bait.
Old spinner baits were made with small gauge wire so that you could feel the bait in the water. Feel the spinner catch and start to spin. This was fine except that it meant sacrificing action of the skirt and the bait under the water. The more rigid the wire used, (Or heavier the gauge) the more action imparted to the arm of the bait and thus the skirt.
Reel that sucker fast enough to make the water bulge around the Colorado or Willow Leaf blades and more times than not it would roll over and over twisting and kinking the line. Add in cheap swivels because they had “nothing” at all to do with the “action” and you have a bait that catches fish, rife with problems, but which can be improved.
Enter the Punisher Lure company. Stephen Headrick, owner of the company redesigned his new spinner bait from the “Water” up. He started by creating a thin minnow shaped head with red eyes, that acts as a keel preventing the bait from “rolling” over and over in the water. I tested the bait using a Bait Casting reel and reeling as fast as I could and then to add more speed I pulled the rod along the boat as I reeled in. I TRIED to make the spinner bait roll and could not. Stephen also added a heavier gauge wire so that the lure does not absorb any of the shocks and bumps it gets in the water, this transmits those bumps to the arm of the bait and thus to the skirt making it pulse twice as much as an old time spinner bait would. Include a high quality Sampo Ball Bearing and Abbra Kadabbara you have a “New” and improved spinner bait.
He then ads anywhere from 5 to 8 strands or red plastic to each bait no matter what the color of the rest of the skirt. Some baits come with a single Colorado or Willow leaf blade, while others come with double blades and one line of the baits comes with one regular colored blade and a red blade.
Jim Dicken / Editor Fishin.com |