Go Premium
Go Premium
Fishing Charts
SST Charts
Articles
Tutorials
How-Tos
Rigs & Knots
Species
Travel
Boats
Account
North America
Massachusetts and Maine
New York and Rhode Island
New Jersey
Delaware Maryland and Virginia
North and South Carolina
Bermuda
Florida
Florida Panhandle and East Gulf
Louisiana and Central Gulf
Texas and West Gulf
Southern California
Northern California
Pacific Northwest
Hawaii
Australia
Queensland and Gold Coast
New South Wales
South Australia and Victoria
Perth and Western Australia
Tasmania
Fiji
Carribean
Bahamas
Cayman Islands
Puerto Rico
Dominican Republic
Anguilla to Antigua
Guadeloupe to Barbados
Mexico
Cabo and Southern Baja
Sea of Cortez
Puerto Vallarta
Manzanillo and Acapulco
Veracruz
Cozumel and Cancun
Middle East
Turkey and Cyprus
Persian Gulf
Maldives
Europe
Southwest England and United Kingdom
Portugal
Strait of Gibraltar
Greece and Aegean Sea
South America
Venezuela
Ecuador
Peru
Chile
Africa
Canary Islands
Cape Verde
Mauritius and Reunion Island
South Africa
Rigs & Knots
How to Make a Double-Hook Rig
Learn to build a double-hook rig for offshore trolling lures.
Will James
The double0-hook rig can improve your hook-up ratio when trolling large skirted lures. To make the rig, you'll need a set of heavy-duty crimpers, double-barrel sleeves (2.8 mm pictured), stainless-steel cable (900-pound Malin pictured), two hooks (11/0 pictured) and chafe tubing.
Begin by sliding a sleeve and chafe tubing onto the end of the wire cable.
Bring the end of the cable back into the other side of the sleeve to form a loop.
Slide the sleeve into the crimping tool to hold it in place while you tighten the loop. Crimp the sleeve.
Your loop should look similar to the one pictured above.
Take one of your hooks and place the cable loop in line with the back of the hook's eye. Take the leader you plan on using and connect the two in the loop from the leader connection. The chafe tubing you placed on the cable loop will protect the leader from becoming abraded by the cable material.
Take the lure you plan on using and slide it all the way down the leader.
With the lure in place, you will now be able to judge where to trim the cable to form a loop for the second hook. In this case, cutting the cable at the end of the lure skirts will give us enough extra cable to work with for the second hook.
Slide the lure up out of the way before you crimp the second hook in place. Slide the crimp sleeve onto the free end of the cable followed by the second hook. Be sure to run the cable through the eye of the hook so it will face in the opposite direction of the first hook.
Slide the lure back down into place and adjust the position of the trailing hook. You want the eye of the second hook to sit inside the ends of the skirt as shown, with the point of the hook exposed.
Tags
Bluefin Tuna
Marlin
Sailfish
Save time and fuel with the FishTrack app.
Download The App Now