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Chance_Taker4

Getting By Baits To Sink

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I am new to pouring my own plastics. My wife got me everythign I use for Christmas. I am using LureCraft 500 plastisol. I love the softness of this bait for my shakey head worms and craws. However, I am also making 5" senkos but I cant get the plastic to sink. I tried using little salt then I tried using a lot of salt to no avail. What can I do to make my plastic sink? Do I need a different type of plastsol or is there an additive I can use to make them sink?

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There are two things commonly used to make stick baits sink, salt or glass beads.  If you're injecting, glass beads can be hard on your injector but they make for more transparent baits than salt..  Use 2 tablespoons of glass beads to 4 oz of plastic.  If you use salt, the basic formula is 1 cup plastic, 1/2 cup salt and 1/4 cup softener.

Edited by bryanmc
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There are two things commonly used to make stick baits sink, salt or glass beads.  If you're injecting, glass beads can be hard on your injector but they make for more transparent baits than salt..  Use 2 tablespoons of glass beads to 4 oz of plastic.  If you use salt, the basic formula is 1 cup plastic, 1/2 cup salt and 1/4 cup softener.

Thank you currently I do not use softener because I find lurecraft's 500 formula to be extremley soft already. Should I add softener to make it sink?

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Thank you currently I do not use softener because I find lurecraft's 500 formula to be extremley soft already. Should I add softener to make it sink?

no, more softener will make it more buoyant. you are probably not adding enough salt. how much salt - plastic have you used?

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That is because salt is heavy and it sinks (the whole reason for adding it) you need to keep stirring it to keep it suspended. the reason your sticks aren't sinking is because the salt isn't getting into the bait, its sitting on the bottom of the cup. Buy the salt offered by the suppliers (Bait Junky's, Bear's Baits, Lure Craft etc) it is super fine and will suspend better than a coarse table salt. 

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That helps a lot I live in the same city Jann's netcraft is located so I get all my products from them however they don't carry salt and their reason was table salt works better so they done sell it. So I have been using plain table salt in my baits

It doesn't work better ;) Don't grind it up either, makes it clump badly and settles out faster. order it from one of the suppliers listed.

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Hey Gator Baits I was having trouble with salt for a while myself and I finally just gave up on it. It is like bryanmc said your baits will come out more transparent so it will be so much easier for you to get the color you want.  And if you put the amount that he mentioned you will get a perfect sink rate similar to a real Senko. So I say even if you get the salt and you do get the sink you want down I would not just forget about the bead blasting media if I was you  because one day you might just want to make a certain color and the blasting media will be another option.

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I've shot hundreds of baits with bead media and one thing that is absolutely imperative if you plan on doing so is to take some work oil and put it on the oring and lubricate the inside of your injector. I do this before I start and am pretty liberal with the oil. Then I add a little more after every 3 shots or when the injector feels like it isn't moving smoothly.

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I haven't had any experience with salt (other than remelts). However, I have used the HDA from Do-It and it works great. I use 3.75-4 tablespoons of it to a cup of plastic and 1.75 tablespoons of softener. I am using a medium plastisol and it comes out almost identical to a senko sink wise and softness. Baits also seem to be a little more durable than salt baits and it stays suspended better.

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salt is the best stuff in my opinion, yeah it clouds the baits but they work exactly the same.

 

salt is the cheapest, and its a natural resource. i'm not an expert but i'd say that salt baits would break down faster than silica or glass.

I would rather use salt to make them sink. If I use salt will I need to add softener?

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yes if using medium plastic you will need a fair amount of softener, even if using soft plastic you will still probably need some.

 

the whole idea of the stick bait is to get the right weight to make it sink but also the right softness to make it wiggle. too soft and it wont rebound itself to keep wiggling, to stiff and it wont flex enough to wiggle.

 

i put a lot of time an effort into the right ratio of plastic / salt / softener to get it just right. my suggestion is to experiment with formulas, write everything down and use different colors so you know what is what, test them in a pool or fish tank or even a clear lake to see what works the best. 

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