What causes plastic mush meltdown ?
I am sure somebody here knows what I am talking about...
From time to time, I find some of my plastic cases that lures came in, melted in spots where a worm or something has touched it. I have as also found some of my lures are mushy and melted. It seems to be chemical , not thermal .What causes this?
Thank you in advance.
Nanna
Chemicals inside the plastic that outgas out
[QUOTE=Nanna;519127]I am sure somebody here knows what I am talking about...
From time to time, I find some of my plastic cases that lures came in, melted in spots where a worm or something has touched it. I have as also found some of my lures are mushy and melted. It seems to be chemical , not thermal .What causes this?
Thank you in advance.
Nanna[/QUOTE]
I'm thinking it's a organic chemical that's trapped inside the plastic and outgases out of the plastic over time. I'm not that familiar with all the types of chemicals in the plastic as they are proprietary for the most part. Trade Secrets. Perhaps they should have issued a Material Data Safety Sheet (MSDS) for the plastic baits as that's normally required by law. But not everyone in the manufacturing business issues an MSDS. The MSDS should say what chemcials are in the product and how they affect human heath and safety. IE if they are hazardous or flammable.
Not all plastics are the same either.
Bottom line is that we really may never know exactly what's going on.
O rings rigs them up wack worm style without wiegh
[QUOTE=Nanna;519139]I thought you were only supposed to bite the head off of live worms, not plastic?
I am going to try the O-rings, I have read they make plastic worms last longer... what do ya'll think?[/QUOTE]
You can put an "O" ring around the worm in the middle of the worm and then put the hook though the O ring instead of into the plastic worm. This is what I think they call Wacky Worm Style. The worm will float down slowly and fish will hit it as is slowly falls through the water column. I guess it's used in shallower water as it may take a long time to since in deeper water without any weight. I'm pretty sure they fish this in shallow waters in the weeds and weightless. Just make sure that you can see your fishing line well and watch it very closely. Any ticks or movement indicated a fish took the bait. So set the hook fast and hard if you see your line moving or the bait suddenly stops falling. It's either a fish or it's on the bottom.