LEARN QUICK, PROVEN TECHNIQUES TO KEEP YOUR CRANKBAIT,
TOPWATER, JIG, WORM, BLADE BAIT AND SPINNERBAIT HOOKS RAZOR SHARP!
No matter what your skill level is, beginner, intermediate
or advanced tournament angler, ultimately your final connection to a fish
is by a hook. The hook is what brings a striking fish into the boat and
this fact makes sharp hook knowledge one of the most important considerations
you can make every time you cast or troll. Sharp hooks are extremely important
on lures like crankbaits and topwaters where impact force between the
mouth of the fish and the lure hooks is very low. On crankbaits and topwaters,
a fish may inhale them when they have zero forward speed, are floating
upwards, traveling slowly forward, or are at great depths on light line.
This means low impact to drive the points home and crankbait strikes are
totally unlike worms or jig and pork combos where the angler can use a
stiff rod to generate high rod tip speed on heavier line to slam a hook
point past the barb.
POINTERS ABOUT HOOK POINTS
In the 1990s, hook manufacturers, both U.S. and foreign, have finally
addressed the need for sharper hook point designs and there are a number
of specialty hooks on the market. Here are some of the hook points designs
and comments about them.
TRADITIONAL CUTTING EDGE WITH INSIDE BARB
(Most common and readily available design)
Excellent design, but usually needs a touch-up with a file (this sheet
shows how!). This point style can be made lethally sharp only with a file
and contains large "burrs" around the barb which reduce penetration, or
very high barbs that need trimming. The big advantage is that this style
of hook can be purchased economically and is available with the ideal
short-shank, wide-gap treble hook configuration.
TRADITIONAL CUTTING EDGE WITH CONICAL MECHANICAL SHARPENING
- "CONE CUT"
Sharper at point but the traditional point can match it with a just couple
of file strokes. More expensive to achieve.
CONICAL POINT WITH FLAT, WEDGE BLADE
A good hook for plastic worms. Resists bending on impact and is easily
sharpened. Relies on high rod tip speed to penetrate. Not available for
crankbaits.
CONICAL POINT WITH TRANSITION TO WEDGE SIDES", THE ICE
PICK STYLE"
Good worm hook for big fish. Does not bend easily and is easy to touch
up. Poor on crankbaits.
TURNED-IN BARB & POINT - TRADITIONAL CUTTING EDGE
AND ANGLED THROAT AREA TO HOLD FISH
Good angle of penetration but will need standard sharp point and small
barb to be efficient. More expensive. Good on crankbaits.
note: Forging alters metal grain but achieves more tensile
strength in hook metal.
MULTIPLE BARBS
Unnecessary on crankbait hooks. Harder to penetrate and more damage to
released fish.
"BEAKED" OR CURVED POINTS
Usable but inefficient on a crankbait. Hard to sharpen and often collapses
on impact. Poorest of all crankbait hooks!
MULTIPLE CUTTING EDGE - "OWNER" STYLE"
Good on worm- and jig-style hooks. Also available on trebles. Uses ideas
on cutting edges from items such as surgical needles which require low
pressure to penetrate. Expensive on a per-hook basis.
WHAT REALLY COUNTS ON HOOKS?
Invariably, and ultimately, it is point and barb design that penetrate
the fish's mouth parts and hold it. Regardless of shank, gap and throat
style, you will need a sharp point, any available cutting edges and a
de-burred barb. Following are some problem areas to keep alert for!
RECEDING POINT LENGTH
A great part of successful hook point design comes from the correct length
of the point to barb area. If this tapered wedge becomes too short, it
will be difficult to get good penetration. Look out for short, poorly-formed
points struck in factory dies. These are hard to sharpen and do not penetrate
well. Replace individual hooks with this defect. Over-sharpening also
causes this condition.
BENT POINT
A bent point will cause immediate fish losses and your first sign of trouble
is a fish that jumps and throws the lure. This is most common on worm
and crankbait hooks and needs immediate correction. The causes of bent
points are, in order of occurrence probability: over-sharpened "hair thin"
points, poor point design, impact with hard mouth bones of fish and shake-off
from snags, especially rocks. Bent points can be instantly detected by
sliding fingertips from area outside barb down to the point. Correct immediately
with a file or replace lure or hook if fishing time allows the delay.
You may also set the lure aside to replace the hook at home.
"BURRS" ON BARB
A high, prominent barb with a burr elevated by theforming dies can easily
stop penetration past the barb. This area is quickly reduced and sharpened
using a Luhr Jensen #9130 Sharp Hook File.
WHAT ABOUT TESTS FOR HOOK SHARPNESS?
Only a file can put cutting edges and angles on a hook. "Finger nail"
penetration tests are meaningless on a crankbait-style hook. Fish do not
have "fingernails" and all you want to do is cut your way in and through
the skin, cartilage or gristle over bony areas.
WILL A CUTTING-EDGE POINT CUT ITS WAY OUT AGAIN?
There is little evidence of this, especially when the hook penetrates
past the barb. On crankbaits you must play fish according to the fact
you can loop around a bone with the hook gap and bend, but rarely penetrate,
bone. You will be attached to fish only by skin and cartilage areas, so
play them accordingly.
DO I NEED SPECIALTY HOOKS ON MY CRANKBAITS?
You will seldom need expensive and hard to find specialty hooks if you
learn to sharpen your standard straight-point, round-bend V.M.C. 9650
hooks! Most specialty hooks offer a sharp point that will soon need sharpening
after impact and their point sharpness can easily be matched by the sharpening
sequences shown here. A case for stronger hooks or one size larger hooks
exists if you must stop large fish from making a run in timber or brush.
In this case, forged gap or 3X strength-rated hooks can help.
Teflon¨-coated hooks have quick penetration as long as
they have a good point design, but their effectiveness is reduced as soon
as they need sharpening and expense is still a factor.
HOW DO I SHARPEN SPECIALTY HOOKS?
Just follow the blade cutting edges and point angles already on the hook
and restore them with a file.
LUHR JENSEN #9130 SHARP HOOK FILE
Available in 4 1/4" and 5 1/2" lengths.
Remember, a file only cuts on the forward stroke! Store
them in a WD-40-soaked plastic filesaver pouch right near you in the boat
as you fish. That way you can quickly touch-up hooks as needed in seconds.
Luhr Jensen was the first to offer this great file and only a file will
form the desired cutting edges. Use the 4 1/4" model for hooks up to size
4 and the 5 1/2" file for those larger than size 4.
With practice, you can get a hook as sharp as many specialty
hooks or even do a more refined "tournament-style" sharpening that is
lethal on crankbaits. Remember, sharp hooks are dangerous, so to avoid
injury, treat thrashing fish with great caution and handle all lures with
care.