09-19-2013, 07:27 AM
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Fishing TN Staff
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Old Hickory
Age: 44
Posts: 2,173
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alphahawk
Yeah it is not a full size truck....but hey it is one heck of a step up from a Versa....LOL. I assume you have ridden in one...is it reasonably quite....comfortable?
Regards
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Rode in one for twelve days for more than 6,000 miles. There were three of us, 5 kayaks, and lots of fishing gear. The truck done real well. I just prefer my full sized truck, but from a Versa into a Frontier, and would be a much more comfortable ride.
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09-19-2013, 07:42 AM
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Master Trout Magnet
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Columbia, TN
Age: 73
Posts: 5,490
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Thanks for the info.
Regards
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09-20-2013, 07:35 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Clarksville
Posts: 984
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alphahawk
My Versa has wheels so don't know about the hub caps. I use both tungsten hair jigs and the bare jig heads also. The naked jig head I use with a Trout Magnet body. But those tungsten hair jigs are some amazing stuff. I am not an expert on tungsten but am getting there. Last year I bought a lot from this company in Oregon that just up and vanished. They had the jigs made for casting and were not necessarily for ice fishing.....they had normal shank hooks. When I couldn't get from them I ordered some from eBay that were 5mm but had a very short shank hook and were really made for ice fishing. Now that I am almost out....down to 4 tungsten ones left.....I have found a very reputable company and have 20 mixed on the way. The stuff is expensive but if you ever fish with it with light gear in deep water you will be amazed. Here is the site https://www.sportsmensdirect.com/sto...th=23_73_68_64
These folks have some great stuff. I have some 6mm Boogie Balls coming and some 6mm Heavy Hair Balls coming. Sportsman Direct is out of Michigan and from what I have gathered is a very good outfit. I only use the stuff late fall through winter....just too expensive. If you want some smaller stuff there is Iceman Barry. http://spookyspiders.bravehost.com He makes regular shanked tungsten jigs but his biggest is only 4mm...which is about 1/50 of an ounce....but his Road Kill jigs are really popular. Hope this has helped you out some.
Regards
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Those things are on the pricy side...at the rate I was getting hung up and losing TM's yesterday, I'd end up broke in no time using those.
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09-20-2013, 09:18 AM
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Master Trout Magnet
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Columbia, TN
Age: 73
Posts: 5,490
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nomad60
Those things are on the pricy side...at the rate I was getting hung up and losing TM's yesterday, I'd end up broke in no time using those.
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You got that right Nomad. I do lose some....will lose them all in the next 3 months or so.....but I only fish with them in deep water, during late fall through winter. I wish I could use the smaller sizes all through the year but even those are a buck each. Just cant afford to do that. But man I sure love fishing with tungsten.
Regards
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09-20-2013, 10:53 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Inglewood, Nashville, TN
Age: 45
Posts: 424
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i just passed 200k in my 2001 frontier.
It has been a great vehicle.
I plan to buy a newer one in the recent future.
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09-20-2013, 11:17 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Murfreesboro
Posts: 229
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Blink,
When exactly does/did the "recent future" occur? Ha ha!
Alpha,
I have a 2007 crew cab/long bed and I love it. Aside from one battery cable corrosion issue, it has been problem free for 130K miles so far.
20mpg highway, quiet and comfortable for it's size.
The Frontier is really a mid-size truck. It's bigger than a Ranger or Sonoma.
Billy
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09-20-2013, 11:30 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Inglewood, Nashville, TN
Age: 45
Posts: 424
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whenever the wheels fall off i reckon!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fishbus
Blink,
When exactly does/did the "recent future" occur? Ha ha!
Alpha,
I have a 2007 crew cab/long bed and I love it. Aside from one battery cable corrosion issue, it has been problem free for 130K miles so far.
20mpg highway, quiet and comfortable for it's size.
The Frontier is really a mid-size truck. It's bigger than a Ranger or Sonoma.
Billy
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09-20-2013, 01:05 PM
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: london, ky
Posts: 2
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Maybe one of those fellows will be the new world record some day.
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09-20-2013, 01:14 PM
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: london, ky
Posts: 2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cat-tales
Yep, LSC is quite a place......I've fished it for over 50 years, and it just keeps producing year after year. Especially with all the changes over the years, (zebra mussels, gobies, etc.) , it seems like thru each "environmental curveball" , LSC comes on stronger. Without question, the best Musky fishing on the planet, great walleye numbers, and smallies are everywhere ! The perch, bluegill, and crappie fishing is sort of "overshadowed" by the rest of it, but come Fall & Winter, they take center stage.
Throw in the occasional Sturgeon or 20# Channel Cat, just to keep things interesting.
Like any area, it has it's downside too, namely -20 below zero for days on end in January, 5-6 feet of snow, or a 25-30 knot NE wind can turn the lake into a "herd of white elephants" in a matter of minutes. LOL
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LSC stands for what lake?
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09-20-2013, 01:37 PM
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Master Trout Magnet
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Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Columbia, TN
Age: 73
Posts: 5,490
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fishbus
Blink,
When exactly does/did the "recent future" occur? Ha ha!
Alpha,
I have a 2007 crew cab/long bed and I love it. Aside from one battery cable corrosion issue, it has been problem free for 130K miles so far.
20mpg highway, quiet and comfortable for it's size.
The Frontier is really a mid-size truck. It's bigger than a Ranger or Sonoma.
Billy
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Thanks guys. My Versa has 217,000 put on it since 2008...all fishing. I expect to get another 80,000 and even if I go ahead and get the Frontier it will still take me on those long fishing trips...gas mileage is just too good. Nissan makes a good vehicle and Toyota is the only other company that is left that make mid size trucks. I had an Ford Explorer Sport Trac that I got 317,000 miles out of and sold it and I still see it on the road from time to time....should have kept it.
Regards
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09-20-2013, 02:37 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Nashville, TN
Posts: 2,592
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyJack
LSC stands for what lake?
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Lake St. Clair, it's a smaller body of water connected to the Great Lakes, and by smaller, I mean compared to the Great Lakes.
__________________
Keep Livin' the Dream!
Mike
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09-21-2013, 01:32 PM
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Cookeville, TN.
Posts: 40
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Yes, Lake St. Clair is considered a "connecting water" , connecting Lake Huron to Lake Erie, by way of St. Clair River and Detroit River. It is 22 miles across, with roughly 70 % being in Canada. The entire NE corner is the Walpole Indian Nation (Canadian Native Americans) , it reminds you of the Everglades........un-inhabited,un-developed, swamps and rivers for miles & miles, and it's off limits without a special permit. Great fish raising habitat.
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09-26-2013, 09:56 AM
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Member
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Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Nashville, Tn 37215
Posts: 118
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alphahawk
I am using 4mm...5mm and soon will be using 6mm. The 4mm will weigh about 1/50. Tungsten will allow you to impart much more action to your jig than lead will. Meaning if I am twitching it will respond much quicker....and yet I can still fish it slow. I can have more weight and yet keep my small profile more so if I had to step up to 1/16 or 1/8 ounce in lead. If you are down deep it really transmits that tick up the line far better than lead. Last year I would put on a 1/8 ounce lead head and cast to same spot but my bite and catch ratio went way down. Put the tungsten back on and it went back up. I don't use it in summer as I don't need to get that deep and so I save it for fall and winter fishing. The stuff makes a hair jig and even soft plastics more lively. Because of the density the feel is 100 times more sensitive than lead. You can really feel the thump when a fish hits it. If you go back and look at some of my posts from last Sept-Oct you will see where I was catching Gills out of 20 to 30 feet of water just like you had found a bed in spring time. The Smallies were killing it also. I had read an article out of In-Fisherman magazine that got me started using it. I was anxious to try it on into December and the winter months but my knee blew out late November and did not fish again until late March this year. Some...a few....say it is hype. All those ice fisherman are not dummies....and they love the stuff. I love fishing with it also and hopefully will have some good reports in the coming months about it catching a lot of fish in the winter.
Regards
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Thanks for the reply Alpha!
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