Great work. I appreciate your creativity and attention and to detail. One question: You seem to use brass in most of your lures but never copper. Is that because copper is too soft? I ask because I have access to old copper water pipes so it’s easier for me to get. I’d have to purchase brass so copper has been my choice. Your thoughts please.
Hello, thank you very much for watching, I use copper less often, and yes, you're right, because it is soft, but there are baits I made with copper, here are a few videos: ruclips.net/video/KA49RWBQQpw/видео.html ruclips.net/video/7n6PT-rG0-g/видео.html ruclips.net/video/w5GFFdZ0teo/видео.html ruclips.net/video/23vB_MsitiQ/видео.html ruclips.net/video/k3sUsYXoua8/видео.html ruclips.net/video/eIN50hN0aPo/видео.html
Hi again, Pavlo. I really like the way the opposing rotation of the two blades makes the entire lure vibrate as it's retrieved. I'll bet that when the high water level in that river subsides, you'll catch plenty of fish with this spinner. Please let us know! I'm interested that you decided to cast your own brass "lure body" instead of buying one, perhaps from the same supplier from whom you bought the large purple bead. In any case, before heating the scraps of brass, you added something called sodium tetraborate. What part did that play in the process? I'm just curious. All the best, Chris (Maine, USA)
Hello, the duck was not hurt, she was just indignant :)
What do you think of this lure?
Buen trabajo amigaso muy ingenioso gracias por compartir tus vídeos son muy buenos pero recuerda nos debes muchas cacturas 😅😅
Great work. I appreciate your creativity and attention and to detail. One question: You seem to use brass in most of your lures but never copper. Is that because copper is too soft? I ask because I have access to old copper water pipes so it’s easier for me to get. I’d have to purchase brass so copper has been my choice. Your thoughts please.
Hello, thank you very much for watching, I use copper less often, and yes, you're right, because it is soft, but there are baits I made with copper, here are a few videos:
ruclips.net/video/KA49RWBQQpw/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/7n6PT-rG0-g/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/w5GFFdZ0teo/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/23vB_MsitiQ/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/k3sUsYXoua8/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/eIN50hN0aPo/видео.html
@@CopperFishLure thanks you so much. I will watch them and I’ll try my hand at copying them.
Nice lure
Thank you
I wish I had the patience and motivation to make lures and the motivation to actually go fishing would help too
Hi again, Pavlo. I really like the way the opposing rotation of the two blades makes the entire lure vibrate as it's retrieved. I'll bet that when the high water level in that river subsides, you'll catch plenty of fish with this spinner. Please let us know!
I'm interested that you decided to cast your own brass "lure body" instead of buying one, perhaps from the same supplier from whom you bought the large purple bead. In any case, before heating the scraps of brass, you added something called sodium tetraborate. What part did that play in the process? I'm just curious. All the best, Chris (Maine, USA)
I think its to prevent oxidation
Hello, when melting brass, I added a flux, it is necessary so that the metal does not oxidize when heated
Hello. Why are you not responding?
Hi, I replied to our previous comment, I don’t make baits for sale, and shipping will be expensive, about $ 20 from Ukraine to America for example
@@CopperFishLure I am from Poland. Я з Польшы.