BearKing Sinking Minnow Crankbait 120mm 40g
Specifications
| Type | Sinking minnow crankbait |
| Length | 120mm (about 4.7 in) |
| Weight | 40g (about 1.4 oz) |
| Depth | Mid to deep diving, sinking profile |
| Action | Tight wobble with fast fall |
| Hooks | Two treble hooks |
| Best for | Largemouth and smallmouth bass in open water and deeper structure |
Product description
This BearKing sinking minnow is built for anglers who want a bait that gets down fast and stays there. The 120mm body carries a 40g weight, giving it long casting distance and a tight, fast-sinking fall that draws strikes on the drop. The metallic scale finish and sharp gold-and-blue color pattern throw flash in open water, mimicking baitfish like shad and shiners.
Its diving lip produces a steady wobble on the retrieve, with a subtle roll that holds up at moderate to fast speeds. Rigged with two treble hooks, it is set up for solid hookups on largemouth and smallmouth working points, drop-offs, and deeper cover where a slow-sinking or suspending minnow bait would not reach.
How to fish it
- Cast past the target area and let the bait sink to the desired depth before starting your retrieve.
- Use a steady medium-speed retrieve to trigger the tight wobbling action along drop-offs and points.
- Pause during the retrieve to let the bait sink and flash, drawing reaction strikes from following fish.
- Work the lure parallel to submerged structure such as ledges, rock piles, or channel edges where bass hold in deeper water.
Frequently asked
It has a diving lip built for mid to deep water and sinks steadily, making it suited for points, ledges, and drop-offs rather than shallow cover.
Brighter, high-contrast patterns like this blue-and-gold finish show up well in slightly stained water, while more natural shad patterns work better in clear conditions.
A medium to medium-heavy casting rod with 12 to 17 lb fluorocarbon line handles the weight and helps maintain solid hooksets with the treble hooks.
It works for both. Smallmouth often respond well to its flash and fall around rock and gravel, while largemouth take it around deeper cover and channel edges.