TSUYOKI Slow-Sinking Slider Jerkbait with Rattle
Specifications
| Type | Slow-sinking slider jerkbait |
| Length | 60mm / 80mm / 100mm options |
| Weight | 15g / 25g / 51g options |
| Depth | Shallow to mid-depth, adjustable by retrieve |
| Action | Wide wobble with slow fall on pause |
| Hooks | Treble hooks front and rear |
| Best for | Largemouth and smallmouth bass in stained to clear water |
Product description
This slow-sinking slider jerkbait is built around a wide, wobbling body that pushes water on every twitch. An internal rattle chamber adds a loud knocking sound that helps bass track the bait in stained water or low light. The slow sink rate lets it hang in the strike zone during pauses, which is often when reaction bites happen.
It works well worked over grass flats, laydowns, and rock points where largemouth and smallmouth key on baitfish. Twitch-pause retrieves trigger the most strikes, and the shad profile with a lifelike scale pattern gives it a natural look that holds up under scrutiny in clear water too.
How to fish it
- Cast past cover and let the bait settle for a second before starting your retrieve.
- Use short, sharp twitches followed by a pause to let the slow sink trigger strikes.
- Work it along grass edges, laydowns, and rock points where baitfish gather.
- Slow down the cadence in cold water and speed up the twitch rate when bass are active.
Frequently asked
The 80mm or 100mm size covers most largemouth situations and gives good casting distance. Drop to the 60mm size for finesse presentations or pressured fish.
Choose brighter, high-contrast patterns for stained or muddy water so bass can locate the bait by sound and silhouette. Natural shad patterns like this one work well in clearer conditions where a realistic profile matters more.
A medium-power spinning or casting rod with 10 to 15 lb fluorocarbon or braid to fluorocarbon leader gives good action and enough sensitivity to feel the pause and fall.
Yes, the wobble and rattle combination works well for smallmouth around rock structure and current breaks, especially when fished with a slower cadence.