Custom Flounder Gig
Custom Flounder Gig
Decided that I needed something else to do when out at night if the fish are not biting. Looked at some of the gigs in the stores and they looked a little flimsy and mass produced. I wanted one with a weighted head, sturdy prongs and short to fit in the kayak so I made my own. The prongs are stuck into grooves cut into the shaft and then epoxied and wrapped with aluminum mesh. Then I wrapped steel wire around the prongs while the epoxy was still able to be molded and covered everything in another round of epoxy. Of course I have never been looking for flatfish in the shallows so maybe what i made is not ideal... any comments on its usefulness?
Last edited by isubarui on Tue Sep 25, 2007 12:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
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That's galvanized steel and the spike shafts should hold up if you clean it well each time you use it (which, in the case of the threads, may mean high pressure spray or scrubbing it clean of flounder meat). The grinding you did to the tips will, on the other hand, cause rust to show up almost immedialtely on them, even before you put it in the water.isubarui wrote:I couldnt find any stainless all-thread I think (I just bought the most expensive 5/16" all-thread so who knows)and just made the rest with what I had on hand for a first try. The gig will get another coating of epoxy so everything under it should be water tight except for the exposed all-thread.
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Re: my rig
That is one cool rig!dpdogwood wrote:heres my gigging rig.
Is the light 12V?
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details on helmet light
get a shop light with that reflector, remove the electrical iniards and insert a "starfire headlight, and wire it up with clamp ons to attach to the battery. This is a standard light bulb from wallymart, at about 19 to 22.00's. Put a plexiglass cover over the front so water won't hit the bulb. No, it doesn't overheat at all. My idea came because I wanted more spread on the light instead of a direct beam like the normal headlights produce. I can still use my headlight under the water trick too.