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Making new sinkers look old
Have some nice shiny sinkers that I want to make look used and weathered. Any suggestion out there to give them that weathered look and take the shine off. Sam recommended using vinegar. Any other suggestion would be appreciated especially if it is a quick and easy.
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I don't know why but my sinkers don't get a chance to get old when we are blackfishing lol
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leave them in a bucket of water they will loose the shiny finish
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Color coded sinkers for quick identification, nice.
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soap and water..let soak over night and pat dry.
mild bleach and water, soak over night. salt and water, soak over night... |
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Find someone that has the same size as your new one and swap him the new ones for his old dull dirty ones.
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Mine age naturally.
I haven't lost many sinkers this year. Fished one of Sam's flat 12s for three trips. Got another 12 that made it through two trips so far, dark gray and gnarly. |
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great title!!
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Just put them in saltwater for a bit. It won't take long
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Its just my naive curiosity, why do you want your sinkers to look old?
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how do you know if it would attract them or repel them..
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I actually fished a charter on Friday that supplied sinkers, new ones. Had no problems catching a limit ++ at all.
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Great advice here. Lead is a soft metal and the soap will stay on there and leave a scent trail for a short amount of time. I know guys who soak sinkers in bunker juice, because they feel it adds to the scent. Paint will also leave an un natural scent to them for a while too. I like the sand and water bit here. It will work the quickest because the sand will scratch the surface quicker. Great idea that was given here. |
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When copper or brass was used on roofs they would often use urine (horse or human) to speed up the tarnishing process. The verdigris that formed was the desired look. If urine was not available or pissing on you roof was not an option, vinegar was often used. I would think a quick soak would dull a sinker up real nice and any residual scent wouldn't be that far from gulp ( After a day of sticking my fingers in the gulp jar they kinda smell like vinegar...at least to me it does).
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Imma try the salt thing since i do not ahve sand readily available |
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I am not buying into this whole scent thing and being so fussy with your sinkers. When I was alot younger, I fished with a couple of old blackfish sharpies who would out catch everyone on the boat, 5 to 1 or better. They used old spark plugs for sinkers. You can't get much more stinky than that, with the unburned hydrocarbons, soot and oil. I also fished for cod up in Pt. Judith and the sharpies up there sprayed WD40 on their clam baits.
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I like old sinkers, the more beat up the better, each one is like a battle scared veteran but for some reason I can't explain loosing a brand new, perfectly smooth and shiny sinker is just damn upsetting. |
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http://neangling.com/recommended-tac...ter-blackfish/ |
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good thread though. Maybe time to unshine all of Sam's creations... |
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