Daiichi Fishing Hooks
by description
(Model numbers in parentheses)
- Salmon Egg Hooks (D05Z, D06Z, D09Z)
- Bleeding Bait Live Bait Hooks (D23Z, D24G, D16L8, D27Z)
- Live Bait Hooks (D24Z, D16Z, D17Z, D18Z, D19Z)
- Drop Shot'n Hooks (D25Z, D26Z)
- Trailer Hook (D28Z)
- FAT Gap ™ Hooks For Fat Plastics (D46Z, D42Z, D45Z)
- More Hooks For Plastics (D30Z, D37Z, D50Z)
- Catch and Release Hook – (Perfect for Wacky Rigging) (D48Z)
- CopperHead ™ (D61Z, D65Z)
- Butt Dragger ™ (D67Z)
- Bait Hooks (D73Z, D74Z, D75Z, D82Z, D85Z)
- The Circle Chunk ™ (D94Z, D95Z)
- The Circle Chunk ™ Light (D81Z, D84Z)
- Snapper and Catfish Bait Hooks (D87Z, D92Z)
- Bleeding Bait Sabiki Rigs (D03R-)
- Treble Hooks (D93Q, 9807, D99Q, D99BC, D97Q, D97BC)
- Manufacturers Top Choices (2461, 2462, 4630, 4631, 4633, 4643, 4660,
4665, 4663, 4770)
(If you are looking for a model we haven't put on our online store yet, please contact us and we will add it for you.)
Get Serious with Daiichi
Bleeding Bait Triggers the Natural Feeding Response
From bass to redfish, Bleeding Bait works!
The blood-red color triggers the natural feeding response in fish.
The Barb
Besides the point, the other factor of sharpness (the ability to penetrate) concerns the barb. The Daiichi hooks have two types of low profile barbs, allowing for faster penetration. Minibarb - the standard Daiichi barb - cuts into 40% of the hooks' wire diameter. Microbarb provides the ultimate combination of sharpness and holding power, cutting into only 20% of the wire.
Carbon Content
Rated at 80, Daiichi hooks hammer competitors in their carbon content. This translates to harder steel and sharper points.
Tempering
Carefully flex the hook gap a little. This combination of strength while maintaining flexibility separates the top quality hooks from the others! Daiichi takes longer to temper their hooks, but as you can feel, it's worth it.
Forging
Did the hook you flexed have flattened edges in the hook bend? That's forging. The forging process adds almost 20% in strength to the wire. If you flexed a forged hook, you probably didn't move it too far. The Daiichi forging adds strength, but keeps your hook as fine as possible for sharpness and livelier bait action. |