Moderator: Rick
Deltaman wrote:Neat listening to them as well! I've seen some over the years, and know that Rick uses a dog whistle to imitate, but that was the first time I've ever heard what they actually sound like, and agree that Ma Nature built them tough enough to withstand that first drop!!!!!!
Darren wrote:Rick, thought of you and your spinner prowess/history yesterday on my drive back home listening to Ramsey talk shop with Mojo's Terry Denmon. Interesting to hear Terry's perspective on some of the missteps they've made over the years in new product development, and also his thoughts on what's most (or not) effective.
You can catch it at link below if you've got any interest sometime:
https://www.getducks.com/duckseasonsome ... ade-right/
Ericdc wrote:Sometimes it sounds like Ramsey is trying to sound more southern.
Ericdc wrote:Just don't use the durn things and no worries![]()
Rick wrote:But I'm certainly with him on the importance of flash (bigger wings are better) and speed, so my permanent blind spinners are hard-wired through a rheostat (as well as an on/off switch) in the blind that allows them to be slowed down enough for best visibility in the dim light of LST and sped up as the day brightens. Once the light is good,
Deltaman wrote:...a rheostat to control the current/speed...
Ericdc wrote:Just don't use the durn things and no worries![]()
SpinnerMan wrote:When hunting a dry field with a guy a half mile away with a vortex, a dozen spinners, and way more decoys, if you don't use them there will be no worries as you watch large flocks of mallards pile in to their decoys.
Darren wrote:(Rick, you've of course now got the power to delete all this later to unclog your preseason thread or we can move it elsewhere, but for now it's fun to chat).
Darren wrote:In the marsh we'll use them for Sept teal but not once for regular season there. However in the field, seems all the guys I know to be strong hunters with regular success surrounding us continue to not leave the camp without at least a spinner or two. Our experimenting with pulling them last season there showed no discernible change in the birds' willingness to finish for us, none. Remote reliability let us kill our specks so long as I remembered to turn off spinner when the first birds locked for the call.
Next season planning to maybe give sunny conditions a bit more focus in the field than in the past to see if there's merit to what some of those referenced other nearby hunters have been preaching about "sunglasses weather," a condition in which the spinner (literally) shines. Always fun to try new things anyway with hopes the next tweak will prove the ticket.
That’s some “south-of-I-10 ingenuity” right there. That’s awesome.Rick wrote:Deltaman wrote:...a rheostat to control the current/speed...
Dash light dimmer control out of a 1976 Dodge truck.
That’s the big rub I have with them. I have an acquaintance who guides in Canada and over beers after a hunt a couple years ago I asked him which he’d give up in Canada, his calls or his spinners. He didn’t hesitate and reached over into his bag and handed me his call lanyard.Rick wrote:SpinnerMan wrote:When hunting a dry field with a guy a half mile away with a vortex, a dozen spinners, and way more decoys, if you don't use them there will be no worries as you watch large flocks of mallards pile in to their decoys.
Aside from occasionally calling ducks to dry field goose rigs, all of my dry field duck hunting was done in the North well prior to the advent of spinners and most successful if only a relative few birds were using the field or if I was dead on the "X" big bunches were using the day before. If a field was heavily used, and I'd not done my homework well enough, it was frustrating as could possibly be trying to pull even the first big bunch to show even a relatively short way off their spot. Worlds tougher than with Canadas.
Spinners apparently changed that.
Darren wrote:On a tech note on the wing shape, Rick, note Terry's other regret on the kind of teardrop shape wings you're still running. His engineering background mentioning it's propensity to cause undue vibration from the uneven shape, thus the latest and greatest edition going back to the more paddle-like shape that he says vibrates less and can be spun faster.
You might be able to track down some old wings of that new-old shape that are even bigger than those you're running, if bigger truly is found to draw better.
Duck Engr wrote:That’s some “south-of-I-10 ingenuity” right there. That’s awesome.
Duck Engr wrote:That’s the big rub I have with them. I have an acquaintance who guides in Canada and over beers after a hunt a couple years ago I asked him which he’d give up in Canada, his calls or his spinners. He didn’t hesitate and reached over into his bag and handed me his call lanyard.
Have also heard of others saying you might’ve broken a 4-6 pack off of a big bunch before spinners up there. Now you can get the whole bunch, bunch after bunch.
Rick wrote: you'll see there are three holes to allow varying the wing's angle
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