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Francis P. Pandolfi has written: 'Spin fishing basics' -- subject(s): Spin fishing
wheel and axle
when it stops simply spin the reel to attack it until it has no health
You can but after a few days it will lock up and want reel at all. it will not help it spin eathir. if it goes slow then just put a drop of ur reel oil in it. reel oil is also cheaper.
Spinners spin to look like prey fish so predator fish will take them.
it uses a magnet to slow down the spin of the spool to help prevent overcast and tangles in the line. I still suggest you use your thumb to apply tension on the spool as different weight lures will make it impossible for the magnet to be sized perfectly for all application's.
There are two basic methods, depending on the type of reel. If your reel is the push-button type with a cover over it, it is a spincasting reel. If it is the open style with the metal bail, which looks like a bucket handle, it is a spinningreel. If it has the push-button and no cover, with the line exposed where you can place your thumb on it, it is a baitcastingreel.By design, spinning and spincasting reels will twist the line. All you can do is load it properly to minimize the twist. You do not want to let the spool spin on a pencil. Lay it flat on the floor. Usually it should have the label facing up. To make sure this is correct, take the reel off of the rod and hold it upside down over the spool. Turn the handle as if you are reeling in line and pay attention to the direction in which it turns. You want the line to be coming off the spool in the same direction. If it is not the same, just flip the spool over on the floor. It may help to go ahead and tie the line to the reel temporarily and watch it go from the spool to the reel slowly to make sure you have it right. If it is right, the part where the line comes off the spool can be directly below the part where it goes onto the reel the whole time. When you're ready to put all the line on, put the reel on the rod and tread the line through the rod first, to make it easier. Remember a little twisting will occur, but not very much.With a baitcasting reel, just have somebody hold a pencil in the eye of the spool and let it spin while you reel it up.Check out this video to see how it's done. http://www.bassfishin.com/video-tips/how-to-spool-spinning-reel/css/spooling-spinning-reels.jpg
Barrie Rickards has written: 'Spinners, spoons and wobbled baits' -- subject(s): Spin fishing, Fishing lures, Fishing 'Zander' -- subject(s): Zander fishing, Stizostedion, Zander 'Bendigonian graptolites (Hemichordata) of Victoria' -- subject(s): graptolites, taxonomy, systematics, biostratigraphy 'The Pike Angler's Manual' 'Plugs and plug fishing' -- subject(s): Plug fishing, Fishing plugs
A wobbler could be a person or a thing that wobbles or a fishing lure that does not spin but wobbles.
Bob Gooch has written: 'Spinning for Trout' -- subject(s): Spin fishing, Trout fishing 'The weedy world of the pickerels' -- subject(s): Pickerel fishing 'Land you can hunt' -- subject(s): Hunting 'In search of the wild turkey' 'Bass fishing' -- subject(s): Striped bass fishing, White bass fishing, White perch fishing, Yellow bass fishing 'Virginia fishing guide' -- subject(s): Guidebooks, Fishing 'Enjoying Virginia Outdoors'
Norman Strung has written: 'Spin-fishing' -- subject(s): Spin fishing, Spin-fishing 'The art of hunting' -- subject(s): Hunting 'hard times' 'Fishing the headwaters of the Missouri' -- subject(s): Fishing, Guidebooks, Trout fishing 'Spin-fishing; the system that does it all' 'Deer hunting' -- subject(s): Deer, Deer hunting 'The Art of Hunting (Hunting and Fishing Library)'