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Chuck Smth

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Everything posted by Chuck Smth

  1. That's for east-west, we were going north-south on an odd-numbered Saturday who's date was a prime number.
  2. Oh yeah, I see what you mean now. Thanks.
  3. Go to 1:21 in the video to see the Optima bluetooth stuff
  4. We drove by Lake Erie yesterday and the ice cover didn't look anything like that. We went just west of 18 mile creek and it was solid all the way across.
  5. For salmon in the spring you want to run a little deeper than trout, browns and kings rarely mix. Yes you'll pick up the odd king here and there when fishing for browns but for consistent king action you need to move out a little. Targeting salmon is different than just trying to get something to bite. Good news is that once you get the kings dialed in you'll get lots of action because they rarely stop eating! Browns can get finicky about color and whatnot, but kings, as long as you don't go too slow, will eat your lures. Chuck
  6. Fish out deep in early summer, say 300' around 50°F or a few degrees warmer, generally top 50' of water. Silver/blue or silver/green spoons, never get below 2.5 mph. (Speed and temp @ ball). That usually works for me. Don't target them anymore like we did back in the day but we pick up a few here and there when targeting kings. Usually the cohos show up when the kings are in a "flashy" bite mode. Think of them as a "tweener" between kings and steelhead. On properly matched tackle cohos are as fun to catch as any fish in Lake Ontario. You'll get a lot of air time with them. YMMV, lots of good advice around. Chuck
  7. Used Opti's last year and LOVED them. Can't say enough good things about them. The Bluetooth is a game-changer.
  8. Johnson is out of business. Anything for support I've seen is for the later direct inject motors.
  9. Yep, Brookie and well done on the release.
  10. Feb -March is early for tarpon, perhaps later in April would be OK depending on the weather.
  11. Color is important, but fish where you see fish. If the bottom machine is showing a blank screen - move. Kings are eating machines and if you find them and they're hungry they'll usually eat. I'd start with blue green dolphins, NBKs and like stuff on sunny days, maybe move towards blacks and purples if it's over cast. The other thing is if you're new too it stay with on brand and size. Often it isn't actually the color, it's just that the spoon was working good at the speed you were trolling. I like spoons that run good between 2.5 an 3.0 in the spring. A
  12. For jigging I prefer a flasher, that's the quickest and easiest to read. For a standard bottom machine the frequency is still high enough (50 kHz is low frequency! ) and the speed of sound in water is so fast that what you see on the flasher is worst case a few milliseconds behind, so it's essentially real time. Chuck
  13. As mentioned, with cable steering the choices are limited, but that said if I had to troll without an autopilot I'd probably give it up. It makes that big a difference. Probably puts more fish in the boat than any other piece of gear. My $.02, YMMV. CHuck
  14. I'll offer up a different suggestion: run two Dipseys and then run lead off the boards. A five color and a 10 color along with two dipseys should never get tangled and you can deploy them without worrying about them running into each other. This also makes your spread longer and wider so you're fishing a bigger box of water. As you get better you can add more lead lines into the spread. Running two Dipseys off of one side sounds good until you get a screamer on and then you can have a mess, and lose a lot of gear. Others may have different opinions but that's how we do it and it rarely results in problems. Chuck
  15. Your best bet is to design what you want and then have them made in Shenzen by one of the myriad for-contract lure manufacturers there. You'll need to work with an importer to clear the paperwork but trust me, you'll make a lot more margin by having the work done in a low-cost region. With small items like this economy of scale is everything. You worked up a parts and labor cost but you left out the costs of packaging, distribution and advertising. The actual lure cost can be insignificant compared to the time and treasure you'll spend on the business side of things. Anytime you get involved in an endeavor that includes molten lead you're going to have a lot of (expensive!) OSHA requirements to meet. My advice: start small and then if the demand is there, offshore production. Don't forget people like Worth will sell you stuff wholesale you can simply repackage/rebrand too, as will the offshore suppliers.
  16. A FishHawk has a weak link between the ball and the probe. This way, if you snag your ball on the bottom you only lose a cheap downrigger ball and not an expensive probe unit. Second,the downrigger ball has a lot of mass so it won't equilibrate to it's surroundings quickly enough and third, who wants to keep a battery in the cannonball? You'd also need to run a finned weight in order to keep it tracking straight for the speed to be accurate. Other than that, it's a solution to a problem that doesn't exist. FishHawks work really great the way they are. Chuck
  17. Frogger you are so right. My best customers understood the difference between price and value. Like my mentor taught me, "When you sell price you're only as smart as your dumbest competitor!" Chuck
  18. In my personal experience, dealer agreements in the marine business often aren't worth the price of the paper they're written on. I've seen manufacturers break their own territory agreements. I've had a boat manufacturer's factory rep. send a customer from my territory to another dealer out-of-state and lost a deal because of it. That's after spending beaucoup dollars as a dealer to stock, advertise and promote their boats. As far as pricing, you cannot dictate a selling price. As I noted earlier, that's a federal offense (Sherman Act) and you can have a very expensive slap on the wrist for that, along with a lot of bad press. All IMHO, YMMV, that's cool.
  19. Try bass fishing, it makes salmon trolling look pretty darned affordable,
  20. Manufacturers cannot dictate the selling price. That's a federal offense; HOWEVER, as part of your dealer or distributor agreement (aka "contract") they may dictate that you only advertise a certain price. Take for example, TRACKER boats. I sold many, many TRACKER boats for less than the nationally advertised price. It will be interesting to see what happens with Ranger now that they have put a lowball nationally advertised price in the BassPro catalog. Ranger always had the opposite problem, they loaded dealers with inventory and then the dealers needed to move them cheap. If you were a new Ranger dealer you were always competing with dealers giving them away. Chuck
  21. Jim, I'm an engineer in the large industrial pump business. Desalination is pretty cheap. There are large projects going on right now in California.
  22. Transom savers come in two basic flavors. Ones that attach to the trailer frame and ones that slip over the back keel roller. If you have a bunk trailer you generally want the slip over type. If you have a roller trailer you generally need one that attaches to the last cross-member ( since no keel roller is present) but that can be complicated if there are trailer running lights in the way. Roller trailers are a real PITA. The main thing is to make sure the transom saver can go from the roller to the lower unit without hitting the bottom of the transom. Most modern fiberglass boats with Coosa transoms are just fine and happy without a transom saver. You really need it more to keep the motor from bashing the trim rams on bumps. BTW, when I fish saltwater it's the ruler rather than the exception to not see transom savers - even with 4 Verados hanging off the back! Saltwater eats transom savers alive. Another alternative is to buy one of the fixtures that go on the motor on the trim rams to save them. If you don't use a transom saver or have trim ram trailer brackets then tip your motor all the way up, flip down the trailer latch and then lower the motor onto it. The motor should be balanced at that point and put the least stress on the transom and trim. Aluminum boat transoms are - ephemeral. Not if, but when it's going to rot out. Were I to buy a used aluminum boat my first off-season project would be to remove the wood and replace it with a poured transom and then never have to worry about it ever again. Yeah, some people will post "Oh yeah? Well my boat is 40 years old and the transom is perfect:", but trust me, it's not. Even though it looks great you get electrolysis between the aluminum transom and the motor bracket and bolts. This results in pinholes in the aluminum and the wood starts rotting where the motor is attached. I sold high-end aluminum boats for a long time to put myself through college and took a lot of "perfect" trades in with shot transoms! If you have an aluminum boat get a bunk trailer and a transom saver. IMHO, YMMV. Chuck
  23. Interesting discussion about the rollout, but I don's see many comments on the data here. I found the data interesting and stuff about natural reproduction was an eye opener too. We should have some bigger fish this coming year. Maybe not like they were in the 80's ( Those of us that were fishing then sure remember them!) but the fish should be well fed and heathly. I would have liked to see some data on the lamprey control and my experience in 2021 was more scarred fish and we caught some with lampreys attached. I think I remember reading something about how all the rain had blown out the creeks and so they weren't able to treat them, but I can't recall any specifics. Chuck
  24. Bass boats have been using electric trolling motors for decades. Electric power for trolling makes perfect sense. Quiet, efficient, low maintenance. There are already electric outboards available and trolling motors that can be attached to the anti-cavitation plate of an outdrive. If I was setting up a new boat for trolling today I would definitely consider an electric kicker. I already see smaller boats on the lake trolling with bow-mounts with the iPilot and doing so successfully. YMMV, Chuck
  25. As far as the minerals mining - where do you think all the iron, steel and aluminum come from to build an internal combustion engine? Where does the power come from to run the foundries? People forget that. Lithium is plentiful and easy to mine. We have enough lithium to power multiple civilizations. We have free fusion energy from the sun, you get enough Watts per square foot that we can power the entire nation easily with a few hundred square miles out in the desert. Of course, you'd want to de-centralize but you get the picture. Solar energy density is amazingly high. Now, samarium cobalt and neodymium we don't have domestically. That's a concern. Samarium cobalt comes from the Congo and China. Neither is a good option. Engineers need to solve that problem, and they will. Chuck
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