Making a Bass Jig with a Weedguard (MakeJig) - Episode 1

preview_player
Показать описание
This video is the start of a video series in which I will make a custom bass jig from scratch. I will be designing and fabricating the jig from the ground up. Using only a jig hook, a fiber weed guard and a skirt collar I will try and replicate a common largemouth bass jig in the football head style.

If you are curious to see the fishing videos referenced during the introduction of this video you can find them here:

I will be using Autodesk Fusion 360 to design the mold that will house the weedguard and the hook where I will then pour in a two part urethane plastic around bird shot to create a pseudo lead head design. The jig will be designed with a plastic keep that will hopefully help hold on a soft plastic trailer that I have previously designed (in other videos on this channel).

I will also make my own skirt material out of a two part silicone and cut the skirts with a homemade skirt cutting tool. Using rotary blades I will cut skirts with a multi tool that I have designed in Fusion 360 and printed on the Anet A8 3D printer. The skirt material will also be pigmented using different pigments in the slicpig line of Smooth-on pigments (not sponsored). I will also be designing a skirt threading tool that will allow the skirt band to be placed over the skirt material before threading the whole jig skirt on to the jig itself.

I have had a lot of success catching largemouth and smallmouth bass with a skirted weedless bass jig presentation in the past and I constantly lose them in snags where hard to reach big bass live. I decided to design this mold (mould) in Autodesk Fusion 360 because I was sick of paying premium prices for something as simple as a reaction based fish presentation.

I will be pouring these jigs with a two part urethane from Smooth-on called SmoothCast 300 series which cures extremely fast in about 10 minutes and allows the mold to produce multiple jigs very quickly. I also modified the mold after the prototype worked so well, I made it into a 3 cavity mold which allows for greater production of the lures.

Overall I think the 3D printed space will greatly help custom lure makers by decreasing the amount of prototyping and time spent during design. I have been very pleased with the results I have been able to achieve in just a short time making custom lures with a 3D printer.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

I was working on some designs and learning cad to 3d print jigs. Was going to print the jig then use the lego/clay method to make the molds, this saves a bunch of steps. Fantastic!!!

fishnewhere
Автор

Looking forward to the next video(s) in the series!

thewarpsyrhead
Автор

Nice job on the presentation and explanation. Jim and I make some of our own jigs too. Nice to see a good video on the process. Keep up the good work. Tight lines from Rick

rjbassfishingtravel
Автор

Love watching your videos, I just started making my own baits after watching you and a few others. Just got my vac 50 in the mail today to mess around with some craws I sketched up in fusion 360. I love the idea of making your own jigs. do you have any plan on uploading these stls on thingiverse? Thanks again for the awesome videos, keep up the good work.

zacharystanley
Автор

The only reason you only have 500 views is you are so far out ahead that nobody even knows where to look.

HondoTrailside