Megabass 101:(1)
Capturing life
(2) The Balancers
(3)
The Components
(4) Lines
(5)
The Finish
((6) The Coloring
(7)
The Body Lines
(8) Actions
(9)
Stream/Creek Fishing
(1)
Capturing life
What makes Megabass
baits particularly unique boils down to their internal structures (such as our
patented Moving Balancers, rather than their external beauty as many of you may
think). Conventional baits, until Megabass introduced the idea of internal moving
balancers (and later, fixed balancers), had to rely only on their external body
shapes in order to create any desired actions. I believe that (artificial) bait
fishing could potentially be an offense to our Creator because we try to give
life to a piece of plastic. We the manufacturer and you the angler are the accomplices
in this sense and equally guilty. Throughout the history, we humans seem to be
always enchanted with creating life, force/energy out of nothing. All these perpetual
movement machines and life-like toys, and even the efforts of alchemists to create
gold out of base metals will tell you this deep-rooted desire to fool with life.
In this sense it can be said that Megabass is a modern alchemist. Our ultimate
goal is to capture life through the action of our plastic baits. There is no such
thing as still life in the world of artificial bait fishing.
(2)
The Balancers
The moving balancers are spherical and made
of tungsten alloy, and move inside of the bait, guided by the internal structure.
The tungsten balancers are denser and harder, and are therefore closer to a perfect
sphere than other materials. This is important, because smaller and near perfect
spheres respond more quickly to sudden shift of momentum. There are two types
of balancers. One moves lengthwise, and the other type moves left and right. The
lengthwise balancers (for example, the Deep-X Series) are used to achieve better
castability, steeper diving angle and so on. The other balancers are for enhancing
dog-walk (left and right) action. If you are used to the dog-walk actions of the
baits without built-in moving balancers, and watch one of our dog-walking baits
in action, you will notice how quickly and sharply they turn their heads. Each
turn of the head is aided by the shift of balance caused by the balancer(s) repositioning
inside the bait. This device also makes the jerking action of the Live-X Series
more life-like than baits without the moving balancers. The Margay, Revenge and
Leviathans jerking actions are, according to our users, acrobatic.
No wonder, because the position of the balancer can be anywhere along the track
when you jerk it, creating an irregular (that is, unpredictable even
to fish) darting action. But the beauty of this system is that when retrieved
steadily it can also swim in a normal and regular way as well.
With the
invention of plastic molding, all of a sudden plastic bait manufacturers found
a huge empty space inside of baits. Until Megabass came up with the idea of using
the space for the Moving Balancers, it was used primarily for buoyancy or rattles.
There are other types of moving balancer systems such as magnetic balancers and
ones that slide along wires. But we believe our system works best and is the simplest
of all.
The other kind of balancer is the fixed balancer such as the Shaft
Balancer (PAT) used in X-95 Minnow and Flap Slap. The shaft balancers are usually
placed lengthwise along the bottom of the bait, acting as a stabilizer. Whenever
the bait tilts to one side, it tries to regain stability. As a result the bait
swings left and right until it regains its balance (Pendulum action). The idea
of the shaft balancers is the complete opposite of the moving balancers. While
moving balancers exaggerate the imbalance, the fixed balancer actually tries to
stabilize the body movement, which creates a unique action of its own as the bait
is continually imbalanced when it is reeled in.
Finally, one thing should
be mentioned of any balancer, that is, it does add some additional weight to the
bait for an obvious reason. When extra buoyancy is critical for the desired action,
we design the internal structure in order to squeeze out any unnecessary material
(just like the uni-body construction of modern automobiles sheds hundreds of pounds
of steel). Uni-body construction is much more challenging than conventional truck-base
construction because its design goal is contradictory: increase body strength
by reducing materials (steel in the case of automobile, plastic in our case).
This idea is a driving force behind our baits. Take Giant Dog-X, for example.
GD-X is a high buoyancy bait, and its outer walls are a mere millimeter thick,
and yet this weakness is solved by internal walls (with Pop-Max, it
is Back Bone Rib) in order to increase its structural integrity. Surface beauty
is readily visible, though skin-deep, yet the structural design does not reveal
itself until the end of its life. Isnt it ironic?
(3)
The Components
Since baits are tools for fishing, we try
to use the best materials available. Even the small baits such as X-55 minnow
and Live-X Smolt use oversize hardware so that the line eyes which are factory-tuned
and the hooks will not budge when a large fish strikes. In fact Live-X Smolt has
been 8-pounder proofed in Nevada when one of our users caught a state record with
the original hooks years ago. Please be confident about the hardware of our baits.
They will not give up. In case you would like to size up the hooks of our baits,
make sure you still like the action of the new bait. Our baits are
designed with their hooks integrated just like a car is designed with a certain
tire size. Replacing the original hooks with larger ones will affect the action
of the bait and we do not recommend it for that reason. At the same time we are
well aware of the fact that the average age of American anglers is above 40 years
old with many years of experiences. We assume you know what to do with your fishing
tools.
(4)
Lines
Although what line to tie our baits is up to
you, we do recommend line weight for each bait so that you will be able to optimize
its potential. Please remember that your line choice can affect the performance
of the bait. It is not just about the strength and stretchiness, but also about
the weight of the line itself. Experiment with lines of different weight to see
if you can control buoyancy of the bait. In order for the bait to suspend in the
water, the weight of the line as well as the water temperature should be included
in your consideration. After all, the totality of the bait, the line, the rod
& reel and your body (especially, your arm) should be one system. Please read
the Tackle Integration section of the Destroyer 101.
(5) The Finish
If
you hit your bait against a hard object, no finish will survive, perhaps neither
the plastic shell. Even though our baits are built sturdy and coated with hard
plastic, please remember that they are made of a couple of the plastic shells
(the lips are the part of the shells). As I have already said, we want to blow
life into a piece of plastic. How can we do it while a piece of plastic is rigid
and lifeless? There are two ways to do it. One is through external finish, and
the other is through action of baits. When we refer to our finishes, we are not
talking about the colors and markings on the baits. There are several finishes
in our line of baits. Guanium Ghost finish, which is often shorthanded as GG,
is one of them and the most popular.
The Guanium Ghost finish was invented
in order to capture guanine, which causes reflection on fish scales. Aluminum
foil used to be the material of choice, but it was not good enough for us. Aluminum
foil may be a good material for imitating fish scales of large predator fish such
as Tarpon, but being opaque Aluminum cannot capture the translucency of small
baitfish flesh. Thus GG finish was invented. Combined with the fine etched scale
lines reproduced by our molding technology, it gives convincingly realistic baitfish
flesh look to our baits. If you want to see the effect of just Guanium finish
without coloring, go for a bait with the Guanium Phantom finish (GP). If you want
a mirror-like reflectivity, the Metal finish may be the one for you. The Neon-Core
finish is basically the GP finish, but the flat reflective panel is housed lengthwise
inside of the baits. The flat panel will send a much larger reflection than off
the body surface.
If the Guanium finish is representative of the ghost (translucent)
finish, the PM (Pearl Mica) and the others represent the opaque (solid) color
finishes. But bear in mind, since all of our baits are made of clear plastic,
even with non-Guanium finishes, they do not block light completely. Since our
baits allow light to come through the bodies, the colors are much more vivid than
baits made of opaque plastics with whatever colors on it. As for the Mat finish,
it is non-glossy, and therefore does not lose color intensity by reflecting light.
Whether chartreuse or green, our Mat finish colors will not send mixed messages
to fish.
(6)
The Coloring
What are lifelike colors?
In the woods even a small piece of plastic is conspicuous because it is artificial
looking. In fact solid and even colors such as a plastic lid or a bottle do not
exist in nature. Yet, the woods are teeming with all kinds of life in various
stages, even dead trees. This issue involves shapes as well, but that is another
subject to be dealt with later. In any case it is not the colors such as green
or yellow itself, which should be considered here, because all kinds of colors
exist among flowers for instance. Also, I am not arguing that only bright colors
are lifelike. Black soil (and other so-called earth colors) are always considered
the symbol of fertility and life as well. The key here may have something to do
with the reason why camouflage design works well in the woods. Blending with the
background colors in order to hide is obvious purpose, but you want to become
a part of the woods if you want to truly hide. In another words how
can colors help a piece of plastic to become a part of the fishs environment?
Of course we can imitate the colors of primary prey in any environment. The answer
to capture life in terms of colors seems to be how complex (including textures
as well) colors are used not only in order to break up solid colors but more to
create a lifelike pattern of colors. Here we have to introduce another
meaning-laden word: natural. When we anglers say natural in order
to describe a bait color, what we mean is it resembles a particular prey, which
is a living thing of course. More convincingly natural the better
it is. Of course we all know that sometimes unnatural colors work
so much better. But that is precisely because they are so un-natural
looking. This contradiction of artificial color and natural actions of the baits
makes the baits stand out, and yet seem like they still belong in the natural
environment.
Our baits have layers of paints sprayed again and again in
order to get the right color depth. The importance of the color depth is obvious
when you realize the reason why your eyes get easily tired when you look at patches
of solid color surface for a while. That is because it does not have the detail
(complexity) of the natural objects and also there is no transition between the
colors. In order to create black color, we do not use black paint. Instead, we
layer a number of paints. That is why you see purple and other colors in the edge
of black. This is what I mean by the transition and depth.
As for the texture, I only have to mention our Mat finish and the
Shrimp and the Craw colors of the Bait-X. Please take a look at our 2005 color
charts (2 posters). Describing the colors of our baits has never been
easy.
(7)
The Body Lines
Every one of our baits is a reproduction of
the originals, which were hand-carved by Yuki Ito, the founder/chief designer
of Megabass. Therefore, the left half and the right half of the bodies are not
exactly the same, in case you have not noticed. When you compare our baits with
others, which are likely to be designed with CAD machines, theirs seem too artificial
(= un-natural). Since computers can only understand mathematical language, the
end result is often very clean lines. Make no mistake those clean
lines can be very attractive. In fact, take a look at Audi TT or VW New beetle,
if you are not sure. Yet, those lines do not exist in nature. The mathematical
lines will calm you down maybe because they appeal to your reason. Incidentally,
the metallic colors such as metallic silver and even black and white may have
the similar effect on you. You notice that they do not excite us. The fact that
the most of sports cars are red or yellow or blue and we tend to be most impressed
by their dynamic curvaceous (non-mathematical) lines should tell us the relationship
between excitement and natural lines. And in my opinion a designer can ultimately
be judged by those lines he created in his lifetime. That is why looking at the
well-defined hand-drawn lines excite us. Yuki Ito refuses to use CAD machine because
he knows there is no life in mathematical lines. The mathematical elegance should
never be confused with natural beauty, which is governed by very different set
of principles. After all, plastic and other materials used for artificial fishing
bait are very artificial indeed. Transforming these artificial materials into
natural acting and natural looking objects is almost like magic. And magic
always defies the physical reality defined by the rules of physics. Perhaps, many,
many years later when we have spent enough time with artificial environment, we
may internalize this new world. Until then, our eyes and minds (fish too) are
still conditioned by nature. Thank goodness.
(8)
Actions
When I think of life-like action of our
baits, the first bait to come to my mind is X-55 Minnow. The X-55 is a 2-inch
long minnow and you need F2 or F1 or even F0 level of spinning rods to cast it
properly. The way this minnow swims makes me think of what I call pencil
effect. If you hold a pencil with your thumb and index finger and start
moving your hand up and down, the pencil which you know as rigid and
straight begins to look and also feel soft and bent around you finger.
Well, that is what the X-55 makes you (and the fish) believe. When swimming, this
minnows tail looks like it moves left and right just like a fish does. Of
course it is an illusion. But a convincing illusion is far more real than an unconvincing
fact, in my opinion.
Most of our artificial baits are designed to mimic
some action of actual baitfish or some other prey. I do not intend to list them
all up here, but there are good many.
1.
Skating:
Dog-X (Sliding type), which established Megabass
position not only in Japan but also in the United States in the mid 90s. Its smooth
and almost airy skating action for the first time introduced anglers
to the power of the Side-Stepping Balancer System (PAT). With Dog-X we were able
to speed up the dog-walk action with much less effort. Type-X, which was released
in the recent year, is another kind of skater. The skating action of Type-X is
basically circular by which I do not mean it circles around and around. It dog-walks
in a circular motion left and right. Therefore, it stays much longer in the same
spot to generate strikes.
2.
Dog-walk:
Many of our baits have the dog-walk action in varying
degrees. For instance, Dog-Xs cross section is close to round and it sits
horizontally on the surface, so, it receives least amount of water resistance.
On the other hand, since the tail of Dog-X Walking type is weighted, the Walking
type receives a lot more water resistances at its tail. If you pull it a little
harder, it almost jumps out of the water and begins to resemble a baitfish being
chased by a predator. But, this leaping action is captured best by the Dog-X Jr.
If you want the fastest, cleanest and sharpest dog-walk action, Dog-X Jr. is it.
If you are after the subsurface leaping action, then Dog-X Jr. Coayu Slide-Sinker
is it. On the other hand the Giant Dog-Xs dog-walk action makes me think
of a motorcyclist leaning and twisting his body when he turns a sharp corner.
The Giant Dog-X is not a round but more like wide body bait. It is designed to
lean from side to side and push water away when it walks. It appeals to the most
active fish.
3. Poppers:
Our
Pop-X is usually categorized as a popper, but Pop-X is a lot more than a popper.
It makes what you might call bio-sound due to a pair of Water Ducts
(PAT), which lets water to go through its gill areas. And its spit is also more
natural than the splash a conventional popper makes. Pop-X is often
called finesse popper among top-water anglers for this reason. Since poppers tend
to sit still more often it is critical to look real or natural.
If there is any bait which looks more convincingly natural and more detailed than
Pop-X, please let us know. Pop-Max on the other hand is more dynamic, yet it is
equipped with much larger and more complex Water Ducts system which makes this
bait more biological than a piece of plastic. Its action is based
on dog-walk, but it grabs so much more water each time it turns its head, it makes
us think of a water wheel changing the direction of the spin at each turn.
4. Darting action:
When
you jerk your bait it darts. If the bait is designed to dart when jerked, it is
called a jerkbait. It is usually a minnow bait with short or long bill. Our Minnow
series such as X-55, X-70, X-80 TD, X-80 RD, X-95 (Q-GO) and X-110 (One-Ten) are
all short bill minnows, and they all suspend except for X-80 RD (sinking) and
X-110 (slow floating). The Live-X series (Smolt, Margay, Revenge, Leviathan) are
all long bill minnows, and they all suspends in the water. The Minnow series takes
care of the shallow water situations, and the Live-X series are for the mid range
situations. Therefore, the Live-X series baits can be considered a minnow type
crankbait for the mid range as well. Most of them share the Moving Balancer System
of one kind or another for their unique acrobatic darting actions. But, if you
love jerkbait fishing I would suggest X-70 for light spinning enthusiasts, and
Margay and X-80 TD for bait casters. If you have hard time casting Margay with
bait rods, I suggest you try F1 or F2 class Destroyer bait rods, or F3 class spinning
rods. But, Margays castability may not be an issue any longer with the introduction
of Margay StepCat in 2005. X-70 is a flat sided minnow, and that may have a lot
to do with its sharp darting action.
5.
Sub-surface action:
The top-water baits basically
sit on the water surface and they are not supposed to go under at all. The Dog-X
Coayu Slide-Sinker was the first to go underwater in order to break the water
surface in the way a baitfish does when chased by predator fish. And then came
Griffon Zero, which made the definition of sub-surface action very clear. When
in action Griffon Zero sticks out of the water (after all it is top-water bait),
yet, a thin film of water goes over the bait surface as if a submarine is about
to surface. Even though it has a lip just like Griffon SR-X, it refuses to dive
more than 6 inches due to its Water Duct (PAT.). Zero to 6 inch, the new (sub-surface)
top-water range has been created by Griffon Zero.
6.
Wobbling action and Water displacement:
Swimming action of
bait can be explained in terms of angles relative to the two axes; lengthwise
and vertical relative to the bait. But one way to measure lure action is to measure
how much water it displaces with each action. Here, its volume and frequency are
the two key factors. Since water is much denser than air, its lateral lines are
an extremely effective sensory organ. Just like we hear sound waves and interpret
them, fish feel water waves and interpret them. The reason our baits give you
an impression of larger than life action for their size is they do
not just turn their heads left and right along the vertical axis, but they also
turn their bodies along the lengthwise axis as well. The Griffon series and the
Cyclone series bait are truly hard working baits and if retrieved
with Destroyer rods, you will be overwhelmed by the vibration you feel in the
hands, because they displace a huge volume of water. Frequency is determined by
the retrieve speed, which is why it is critical to have widest retrieve speed
range possible. We suggest you conduct a simple test. Tie a few baits to a stick
side by side, and let them swim at various speed. Find out which one will start
to swim or give up swimming before the other baits. The bait with the widest retrieve
speed range has the widest frequency range; therefore, they provide you more ways
to attract fish. This issue of retrieve speed range is as basic and therefore
as critical as balance of fishing rods.
7.
Boil action:
We all have seen boil on the water
surface at some time, and we know what is going on underneath. Well, finally we
have boil action bait, called Anthrax and Anthrax 100 for 2005. We believe Anthrax
is the first bait to capture boil action in the 100 and some years of artificial
bait history, but we may be wrong. Anthrax is a belly up bait with
a good size anal fin, which is the half of the reason for boil action. The other
half is the new balancer system called Roller Gyro Balancer System (PAT. P). With
this system the balancer goes over the lengthwise solid shaft balancer, so that
shift of balance is much more dynamic, in fact dynamic enough to give sufficient
momentum for the anal fin to hit the water surface, and create a boil
action. Another merit of this balancer system is it always lands on the water
sideway exposing not the pearl-white underbelly which tends to blend with the
water reflection, but its side to the predator fish underneath. Finally, when
retrieved, the anal fin which sticks out from the water surface, creates very
natural triangular waves just like a shark fin.
8.
Prop action:
X-80 Pro-Darter has a rear prop, but unlike
ordinary prop baits, this one has an asymmetrical prop. When retrieved it does
not swim straight. Rather, the swim track looks more like a stretched out coil
of wire. It swims with light, high-pitched prop sound with natural splash. X-80
Prop-Darter is not only our first prop bait but also our first boil action bait
as well. Retrieve it by changing your rod position in order to get most out of
this bait. X-80 PD is a truly unique bait.
9.
Bottom contacting:
Within our hard bait lineup, the Deep-X
series and Bait-X belong to this category, especially Bait-X. Bait-X was designed
to cover riprap type of shore structures as fast as you can as search bait. Therefore,
instead of digging into the bottom, it pecks lightly and moves on. Because Bait-X
has high buoyancy it does not get stuck easily. Slow-retrieve it for that reason.
Try Bait-X instead of Texas rigging for a change.
10.
Swisher action:
Ordinary prop/swisher bait do not do anything
other than swishing. They come back to you straight like in-line spinner, swishing
along. Only way for you to shut them up is to pause them, but as soon as you restart
retrieving they restart swishing as well. Our swisher bait, Scream-X and Scream-X
Jr. will dog-walk instead so that their swishing is not one of those constant
kinds. Also, with Scream-X if you raise your rod tip high and retrieve it, you
can stop Scream-X from swishing. Scream-X is designed for spot fishing, that is,
when you know fish are there, therefore you would like your bait to swish only
there. And Scream-X Jr., which is a double prop bait, is for covering larger area
as search bait. Their propeller-based body design twists their bodies when they
dog-walk, which accentuates the swishing action.
(9) Stream/Creek Fishing
For
those of you who do not use anything less than F4 class bait rods, you do not
know what you are missing. If you live in the north including New England region,
you know what I am talking about. There is something special about stream fishing.
It is cool and quiet. Protected by tree overhung, you are often alone with your
feet in the cool (cold?) clean water. You could choose to fly fish if you like,
but light spinning outfit is our choice. The way light line comes out silently
through the guides of F0-68XS makes a sharp contrast with the noise fly line makes,
but both add pleasure to stream fishing. If it is a small stream, you need lighter
and shorter rods such as F0 to F2 class Destroyer spinning rods, but if it is
not so small and especially if there are good size pools here and there, then
you can switch to F3 or F4 class rods including the ones with the Stinger tip
(the Hedge hog series). The bait to be used are, starting with X-30, which Aaron
Martens uses with split shot, and then X-55 minnow, X-70 minnow, Baby Griffon
and then Live-X Smolt for lighter application. For a little heavier application
you may choose Margay, Griffon and even Dog-X. Of course our soft bait made of
V.I.O.S. material is excellent choice primarily because V.I.O.S. is soft yet very
tough material. Otherwise stream smallmouth will tear them to pieces in no time.
F1 to F3 class bait rods are actually rather good choice for large enough streams
and rivers, especially for top water bait. Megabass products including Destroyer
rods are not only for tournament anglers or bass boat anglers, but also for any
angler who enjoys fishing seriously including stream anglers. Did you know we
even make bamboo rods (the Pagani Series) for those of you who want to fish in
the way our granddads used to fish? We at Megabass will never overlook any angler
however a minority they are, as long as they love fishing and need the best fishing
tools for the sake of the best fishing experiences.
Welcome to the
World of Megabass, where compromise does not exist and excitement is taken for
granted.
Order your piece of performance
art today!!