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HEY RICH!!!!

Why? I can see why it might be easier to work out if there is a big bait or pegged weight next tot he shank since it would be the equivelent of a longer lever, but why is it harder to set, and why is it that I get more and better hooksets in most circumstances by using a wider gap hook.
Bob
Jul 17
2004
A wide gap hook can 'rotate' out more easily. A the shank gets in the way of rotating out on a narrower gap hook. It has to BACK out rather than rotate out. A wide gap can do either.

As far as setting goes, amplify the effect to see it clearly. Take your wide gap hook on really strong line, and put the tip of it against something it doesn't want to penetrate easily. Eg, a piece of soft wood. Pull slowly and watch the bend in the hook open up. Do the same with a narrow gap hook of the same size. Note how much harder you have to pull to open the bend. With a wide gap hook, the only solution to the hook's tendency to open up is heavier wire (EG, Gamakatsu Super ine EWGs.) But thicker wire increases the penetration resistance, so it's still harder to set.

We've run this thing through computer modeling and real world tests till we're sick of it. The best hook design from a standpoint of hooking fish and staying hooked is a moderate gap with a sharp turn leading to a longer than average length of wire between the bend and the barb.

RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing

RichZ
Jul 17
Sounds an awful lot like a Texposer to me...

Harry J aka Thundercat Brooklyn Bill's Tackle Shop Fishing Team http://www.geocities.com/brooklynbill2003/products.html Share the knowledge, compete on execution.

Thundercat
Jul 18
   

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