Hunthouse Long Lip Deep Diving Crankbait
Specifications
| Type | Long lip deep diving crankbait |
| Length | 60mm / 75mm |
| Weight | 13g / 18g |
| Depth | Deep diving, floating |
| Action | Tight, high-frequency wobble |
| Hooks | Treble hooks, front and rear |
| Best for | Largemouth and smallmouth bass around deep structure |
Product description
This long lip crankbait is built for getting down fast and staying in the strike zone. The oversized bill pushes the bait into a tight, high-frequency wobble that mimics a fleeing baitfish, while the floating design lets you pause it over cover without snagging. Available in 60mm/13g and 75mm/18g sizes, it covers a range of diving depths for probing deep points, creek channels, and submerged timber.
The realistic scale pattern, 3D eyes, and natural shad coloring give bass a clean profile to key on in both stained and clear water. It runs true on a straight retrieve and deflects off cover on contact, triggering reaction strikes from largemouth and smallmouth holding on structure. A dependable choice when you need to cover deep water efficiently.
How to fish it
- Cast past the target structure and use a steady retrieve to let the lip dig the bait to its running depth.
- Slow down or stop the retrieve when the bait contacts cover to trigger a reaction strike.
- Work deep points, creek channels, and submerged timber where bass hold in cooler or transitional water.
- Vary retrieve speed on the fall and pause to imitate a wounded baitfish before continuing the retrieve.
Frequently asked
The 60mm/13g runs a bit shallower and suits finesse presentations, while the 75mm/18g pulls deeper and casts farther for covering open water.
A medium to medium-heavy crankbait rod with 10-14 lb monofluorocarbon line gives enough stretch to keep bass pinned on treble hooks.
Yes, natural shad patterns like this one work well in clear to lightly stained water where bass rely on sight to feed.
The long bill is designed to dig down quickly, reaching deep diving depths suited to points, ledges, and river channels rather than shallow flats.