Maybe some may come to think that the JigPara Head Bunta is missing a piece, but no, and here we explain why it is fine as it is and how it works.
Those who know what the JigPara Head Bunta is for can turn the page or add it to their order if they need it, for others we invite you to pay attention to two important details, the position of the ring and the arc of the jig head.
Well, now that we have looked at these two data, so small and at the same time fundamental, we must know that the JigPara Head Bunta is designed to drag soft plastics down the bottom, to be more concrete, it is used with hard rock crabs, like the Fighting Claw by Major Craft, the Double Motion by Evergreen or the Keitech’ Crazy Flapper, whatever you choose to use. Such a rounded profile is ment to be used for larger bodies lures, crabs is the peak example yet not the only one. Dragging such candies on the bottom will not leave any deep dweller indifferent, groupers, bass and others will jump on the juicy meal.
Now we put ourselves in scuba mode and observe our rig being dragged along the bottom. Everything is fine until a rock shows up. It is now when the combination of the position of the eyelet and the design of the head come into play. The JigPara Head Bunta is blocked against the obstacle, but the line keeps pulling and taking advantage of the leverage that the eyelet apply on the curve of the head, leans the head forward and easily slips over the obstacle and continues its way. Dadada.
You already know what we recommend the JigPara Head Bunta by Major Craft for, do not overlook these seemingly unimportant accessories, they are the ones that can change the day from catastrophic and economically unsustainable by the number of lures and heads that are being lost, into a successful day and with insignificant fatalities.
Size:
3.5gr (5 units per blister)
7.0gr (5 units per blister)
10gr (5 units per blister)
14gr (5 units per blister)