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Length & Weight: 6¼″ long, ~2 7⁄8 oz.
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Material: Tough and durable ABS resin body.
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Hooks / Hardware: Equipped with 3 heavy‐duty treble hooks (3X) and strong split rings.
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Construction: Wire‐through construction for better strength, especially useful with heavy‐duty casting and big fish.
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Color Variants: Comes in several colors – Black Silver, Bone, Bronze, Green Mackerel, Pearl Red Head, Sardine, Yellow etc.
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Weight Transfer System: Brand new (for this line) internal weight transfer system meant to help cast further.
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Type of Lure: Topwater popper. The huge “water‐pushing face” (cup‐mouth) is designed to throw a big splash, bubble, or surface disturbance.
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Retrieve Styles:
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Stop‐and‐go – that is, pop, pause, let it rest, pop again to draw attention.
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Fast popping retrieve – keep that disruption going; good when fish are aggressively patrolling.
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Jerking / twitching between pops – to imitate an injured baitfish trying to escape.
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Casting Distance: Thanks to the weight transfer system and relatively heavy weight (~2.75 oz), you can make long casts, which is ideal for surf or open water situations.
Target Species & Ideal Conditions
This is a lure made for big, aggressive predators that strike topwater. Some examples:
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Species: Snook, tuna, jacks, sharks, bluefish, stripers, maybe larger trevally, etc. Any game fish that hunt near the surface.
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Conditions: Best when fish are visibly active on the surface (baitfish schooling, feeding splashes, birds diving). Also good in surf or when casting from shore to breakers, or from boats along reefs and structure where predators ambush.
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Light / Water Clarity: In clearer water, brighter or more realistic colors like sardine, pearl red head stand out; in low light or murky water, bold contrast colors (black/silver, bone) help the silhouette.
What makes it great:
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Big disturbance – that loud surface noise and splash draws attention from a distance.
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Heavy duty – built to handle solid fish and harsh surf conditions.
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Long casting – you can reach those fish that are holding farther off or beyond breaking waves.
What you need to watch out for:
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Because of its size and weight, rod, line, and casting technique need to be up to it – fatigue can be intense if casting repeatedly.
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Large hooks may cause more snags (on structure or rocky shore) or more visible hooking; might require leader upgrades.
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The action is less subtle – fish have to be in a feeding or aggressive mode for this to draw strikes; when fish are picky or the water is very calm, smaller or quieter lures might out‐fish it.