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How to Sun Bake Your Crankbaits for Improved Color

  
  
  
  
  
  
Sun paint crankbaits
The Square Bill below started out the same color as the Square Bill on top!


By Jason Sealock

I fish a lot with a lot of anglers. I've seen a plethora of custom-painted crankbaits hidden in dark tackle boxes and trays or secret compartments in competitive fishing boats. We're all looking for a little edge on the fish and more importantly the other anglers pursuing the same fish.

I myself have a bunch of custom painted crankbaits, topwaters, and jerkbaits. Partly because I want a unique bait. The other part is because I have a well-documented tackle addiction, to the point of being considered for the show "Hoarders." I love to see my favorite baits with a shiny new coat.

I recently hopped in the truck with a fishing buddy, Chad Branham who fishes for Murray State and is an avid bass angler and tackle junky like me. A crankbait in his cup holder caught my eye. I could see it was a Strike King KVD Square Bill. But it had a paint job I didn't recognize. I studied it for a time. I finally had to ask," Who painted this?"

"I did," Branham said. "Well sort of."

In fact the bait was painted. Originally it was painted in the Strike King factory, the classic chartreuse and black color. But after a couple months of careful planning, he ended up with a lightly muted chartreuse shad colored crankbait. I've seen a lot of crankbaits and for some reason this one really called out to me.  It was white on the side, chartreuse on the bottom, a lighter grayish black on the top with the red throat.

So what did he do to get this paint job in a couple months? He threw the crankbait up on the dash of his truck and let it sit. About once a week he would flip it and several other chartreuse crankbaits over, so he would achieve a fairly balanced change to his bait.

I've seen guys throw plastics together to make some better looking plastics. I've even heard of guys mixing plastics with crankbaits, although you can warp or induce some unsightly mold marks on a crankbait. But the sun trick has been used by a lot of guys to make their crankbaits a little more fish friendly.

"I learned it fishing on the BFL trail," Branham said. "One of the guys I roomed with showed me some of the baits he 'sunned' and I was pretty blow away by a couple of them and how good they looked. So I started taking baits and putting them on my dash. My truck is perfect because my Ford actually has a tray on the dash. The baits sit right in it and don't move around too much. "

Not all crankbaits "bleed" their color in the sun we've found either. So you'll just have to experiment. But what you'll end up with is a crankbait that's more unique than when you first got it. And sometimes that can make a difference, especially on pressured fish or under different water clarities and conditions. Maybe a chartreuse crankbait appears too vividly in your fishery but a muted white and light chartreuse bait would look perfect to the bass. It's all about the flash and flicker effect when talking about crankbaits, so we think it's worth the time to bake a few baits.

Right now we've got six chartreuse crankbaits baking every day in a shallow box on the porch. Here are a few suggestions we found on sun baking your crankbaits:

1. Cut a small box about 1 inch deep to put the crankbaits in so they won't be shaded at any angle.
2. Find the place at your house that gets maximum sunlight.
3. Remove the hooks from your crankbaits.
4. After several days, rotate the crankbaits to the other side to keep the fading consistent.
5. Be patient. It's not going to happen in a week. It's going to take several weeks to make an impact but you should end up with a pretty unique crankbait.
6. You can take the box with you and let it bake in the truck, on a boat deck, etc.

Sun painted bass fishing lures
These two crankbaits were bought at the same time. The bottom one was left in the sun for 2 months, while the other was kept in a tackle box in a boat compartment. This is just one example of how the sun can help your crankbaits become real fish catchers.

Editors Note: Be sure to follow manufacturer warnings on too much heat around plastic baits. Several baits don't deal well with heat. I like to put my crankbaits out in an open box on the porch rather than in a truck that is like a pressure cooker. You just want to sun bleach them, not cook them so to speak. We've not had a bait yet have problems but others have reported baits that have expanded and cracked due to heat.


Comments

Awesome idea! I have a few cranks that have just faded from use and those tend to be my "go to" baits. I'd like to see some before and after pics using this method though.
Posted @ Tuesday, November 06, 2012 8:20 AM by Chris Himstedt
You're looking at before and after photos. The crankbait on the bottom started out exactly the same color as the one on the top. Both were bought at the exact same time. The bottom one was sun baked for 2 months. It's more beautiful than the picture shows. And it's a real fish catcher, hence the blemishes. ;-)
Posted @ Tuesday, November 06, 2012 10:06 AM by Jason Sealock
I have for a few crankbaits at the ponds or lake hook rusted washed in bleach over with a lite scatch pad replace the hooks. works great! a dual peal or off white is a hard to find color.
Posted @ Tuesday, November 06, 2012 11:26 AM by Gary Williams
David Fritz did this 19 years ago
Posted @ Tuesday, November 06, 2012 11:46 AM by denny powers
Would have never thought of it. But I'm going to try it.
Posted @ Tuesday, November 06, 2012 12:32 PM by Bob E Perry
Great idea but remember that plastics do no fare so well in heat. A friend lost about $600 worth of Lucky Crafts left in the sun and they imploded and folded! When contacted Lucky Craft pointed out that it is printed on the box--do not expose to heat.
Posted @ Tuesday, November 06, 2012 8:16 PM by
Better yet, fish so often they fade.
Posted @ Thursday, November 08, 2012 7:06 AM by Jody
Great article ! I read a few years ago how David Fritts would achieve this by hanging them in his truck. !! Thanks for the info. And keep em coming!
Posted @ Friday, November 09, 2012 8:17 AM by Tim Rewis
it's not the heat that changes the color of the bait. it's the UV rays from good ol Mr. Sun.
Posted @ Friday, November 09, 2012 3:17 PM by cmoua
I do the same thing by hanging my lures from my wife's wind chimes on the back porch. The constant movement keeps it even and the amplified reflection fades my crank baits more quickly
Posted @ Friday, November 09, 2012 4:22 PM by Kyle Smith
Great idea i have that bait and a bluegill pattern of same lure thats way to bright going to try it . Rapala likes the idea they have the new ike 's ink series pre faded
Posted @ Friday, November 09, 2012 4:44 PM by Seapimp
David Fritts showed us this in late 80s. One tip put them on the dash of your truck they will fade faster with heat and sunlight
Posted @ Saturday, November 10, 2012 7:09 PM by Kent Brookman
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