03-02-10, 07:51 PM | #1 |
BassFishin.Com Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Tarpon Springs,FL
Posts: 8
|
Crankbait vs lipless Crankbait
Whats exactly makes the two different?
|
03-02-10, 08:16 PM | #2 |
BassFishin.Com Veteran Member
|
I crankbait has a lip, a lipless crankbait does not. A crankbait is something like a 2-4 diver while a lipless crank is most commonly a rattletrap like the red eye shad.
__________________
This is my Signature there are many like it, but this one is mine. |
03-02-10, 08:24 PM | #3 |
BassFishin.Com Super Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 4,671
|
Lipless crankbait
Lipped crankbait The lipless crankbait generally sinks and you control the depth. The lipped crankbait generally floats and the bill makes it dive. |
03-02-10, 09:00 PM | #4 |
BassFishin.Com Premier Elite
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: San Antonio, TX
Posts: 10,141
|
Tasten, it is like a phillips head vs a slot head screwdriver. Both are screwdrivers but do different jobs. I like lipless baits for covering water and as a search bait. Lipped baits I prefer for fishing specific areas. For example, I fish a lot of what are termed highland lakes. these do not have much grass/weed cover but there is a lot of rock. I love to throw them on rock banks where they dig into the bottom and bounce along. Flooded trees are another area I like lipped baits. My favorite way to fish a crankbait is to throw a square billed bait like a Bandit 100 into flooded trees. Where a lipless bait wil hang up a lot a square bill will deflect off potential snags but will catch a lot of fish.
I have dedicated rods for crankbaits, so I often alternate between lipped and lipless until I find what the fish want.
__________________
It's happened to the best of them: John 21:3 |
03-02-10, 10:44 PM | #5 | |
BassFishin.Com Premier Elite
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Webb City, MO
Posts: 6,387
|
Quote:
__________________
You only live once. But if you do it right, once is enough. |
|
03-02-10, 10:54 PM | #6 | |
BassFishin.Com Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: albemarle, NC
Posts: 788
|
Quote:
__________________
138 bass in 2K10. Biggest 4LBS 14oz. |
|
03-02-10, 10:59 PM | #7 |
BassFishin.Com Active Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Rockford, Ill
Posts: 489
|
They are indeed very different tools for very different jobs even though they are both termed crankbaits. Also, not all lipped crankbaits can do the same job. Different manufacturers and different models from the same manufacturers have very different properties (bouyancy, action, ability to work through heavy cover etc etc). Also, Where lipless vibrating cranks are concerned they also posses different characteristics (bouancy and action for the most part), depending on the manufacturer.
__________________
The words just won't come to me!:confused: |
03-03-10, 12:33 AM | #8 |
BassFishin.Com Super Veteran
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Ridgeland MS
Posts: 3,923
|
Also, in general terms, the lipped crankbaits tend to have a wider wobble than the lipless ones. Every brand/kind of lure is a little different, but most lipless crankbait do more of a fast shimmy or vibration, whereas lipped lures have a more pronounced side-to-side wobble.
__________________
I smell smoke, and I hear sirens. Do you think that's a problem? |
03-03-10, 07:29 AM | #9 |
BassFishin.Com Super Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Jonesville, Indiana
Posts: 3,597
|
This is good stuff.
I also find myself rertieving my lipless baits much faster that the lipped ones. -Mark |
03-03-10, 11:06 AM | #10 | |
BassFishin.Com Super Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Dallas,TX (DFW)
Posts: 2,212
|
Quote:
I think Redbasser,and Mississippiboy covered most of it. But speaking of the tighter wobble/shimmy, A lipless does fairly well for me in colder water because of that..I feel its more natural movement in those conditions compared to a wide wobble of a billed crank.
__________________
[nelsoncustomrods.com] |
|
03-03-10, 11:24 AM | #11 |
BassFishin.Com Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 570
|
I think it’s also important to address when you use a lipless vs. billed crank bait. It’s a big time pre spawn small mouth bait. Targeting staging areas is it’s primary use on my side of the country. Perhaps the reason your asking the question is because of the recent tournament you see the pro’s using lipless vs. billed cranks. It also means you have the bait in the area longer as it suspends etc. It’s also the easy bait to through in my opinion. Just through it and crank. Let rip through the grass or bounce off of rocks etc. You can use whatever color you want as long as it’s Red…. <of course this is my .02 worth. Now with it being the easiest to through it’s also very important to use the right equipment as a lot of hits are missed with lip less (a lot of fish come off) It’s no secret I am a big G Loomis (And now Wafflejaw’s) fan but a good 7’ caster that you can throw as far as you possibly can works pretty consistent with good hooks.
This is not a bad link for a take on the lipless http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wZFg...eature=related I am sure there is a million links out there. Last edited by Vegasspider; 03-03-10 at 11:32 AM. |
03-03-10, 07:27 PM | #12 | ||
BassFishin.Com Premier Elite
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: San Antonio, TX
Posts: 10,141
|
Quote:
Quote:
__________________
It's happened to the best of them: John 21:3 |
||
03-03-10, 08:27 PM | #13 |
BassFishin.Com Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Bellevue,Ohio
Posts: 92
|
Besides the bill, lipless sink when at rest and generally have more and or higher pitch rattles, while ones w/ lips float when at rest.
The ones w/ lips are my favorite because unless using a math formula and the countdown method sinking baits arn't in one strikezone all the time. ex:a bandit series 100 dives 2-5 feet every time so I know right where it is.(at least by a foot or less)
__________________
for sale:parachute,used once,never opened,small stain. |
03-06-10, 09:54 AM | #14 |
BassFishin.Com Active Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: AZ. USA. and Ont. Canada
Posts: 145
|
Please allow me to add that lipless cranks are often fished over, around and through grass. They are often allowed to "snag" on the weeds, then ripped out. Lipless cranks are designed to sink nose down. This keeps the hooks away from the weeds. Crankbaits with lips won't work right if a weed fouls the lip, but lipless baits aren't bothered by a little salad tagging along.
Around rocks and gravel the lipless bait can be yo-yo'd. That is allowed to sink to the bottom them jerked up. This might look like a crayfish snapping it's tail and streaking backward...the rattles might simulate the sound of the crayfish shell segments during this swimming maneuver. |
Disclosure / Disclaimer
Before acting on the content posted, you should know that BassFishin.Com may benefit financially and otherwise from content, advertising, links or otherwise from anything you click on, read, or look at on our website. Click here to read our Disclosure Policy and Disclaimer. |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|