Korda Spinner Rig x3 - Full Range Available - Any 3 for £13.99

    Description


    What Is the Spinner Rig?

    • The Spinner Rig is a very efficient carp rig, especially used “on the deck” (i.e., laying on the lakebed). 

    • It uses a 5.5″ boom (i.e., a stiff link / hooklink of fixed length) for good presentation and to maintain the hookbait away from the weight. 

    • A Spinner swivel is crimped onto one end of that boom to attach the hook. The swivel gives the hook freedom to rotate / move, improving hooking performance. 

    • At the other end of the boom, there’s a crimped loop, which makes it compatible with “quick-change” lead systems (so you can detach or reattach the rig easily). 

    • The rig is designed to be re-used: you can change the hook (or hooklink section) without retying the entire rig. 


     


    Sizes and Hook Options (Barbed / Barbless)

    Spinner Hook Version

    • Available sizes: 4, 5, 6,for the hook itself. 

    • For the ready-tied rig (Spinner Hook version), Korda offers size 5 (exclusive for the Spinner Hook pattern). 

    • Both barbed and barbless versions are available. 

    • The hook has a 55-degree eye angle, which is deliberate: this helps the hook seat properly when the rig is used with a buoyant bait (like pop-up) and a “kicker,” giving a good hooking geometry. 

    • The shank is long and curved, which opens up the gape (i.e. gives more room to hook) when it's used with the Spinner swivel. 

    • Hooks have a PTFE coating, which makes them durable, slick, and helps in penetration. 


     


    Ready-Tied vs Hook Sections vs DIY Rig

    • Ready-tied Spinner Rigs: Korda offers pre-built rigs where the boom, swivel, and hook are already assembled. These are made “exactly the same way as any of [Korda’s] top anglers would do it.”

    • Hook Sections: Alternatively, they sell Spinner Hook Sections, which are just the hook + swivel (pre-crimped). You can attach those to your own boom. 

    • DIY / Tied by Hand: You can also tie your own using Korda’s recommended method. Korda provides a step-by-step guide on how to tie the Spinner Rig. 


    Strengths & Design Rationale

    Why the Spinner Rig works very well:

    1. Efficient hooking geometry: The 55° eye angle + curved shank helps the hook to sit properly and present a good gape when attached to the swivel. 

    2. Reduced tangling: Because of the swivel and the way the boom is constructed, the hook can move freely, reducing the chance of tangles on the cast.

    3. Versatility in hook choice: With three hook patterns (Spinner, Krank, Kurv) and barbed or barbless options, you can tailor the rig to fishing conditions / venue rules.

    4. Quick-change compatibility: The crimped loop allows the rig to be used with quick-change lead systems, which means rigs can be replaced or changed without retying the entire boom. 

    5. Reusability: You don’t always have to throw the whole rig away — swap out the hook section if needed. 

    6. Durability: Pre-crimped swivel and good quality boom material ensures high strength; PTFE coating on hooks for longevity. 


    Considerations / Trade-Offs (Especially for Barbless)

    • Barbless vs Barbed: Barbless hooks are often preferred for fish welfare and for venues with barbless-only rules. However, some anglers feel they lose more fish with barbless due to less hold, so you need to manage pressure / play fish well. (General angling trade-off; anecdotal discussion exists in community – e.g., see some barbless-hook-losing fish discussions.) 

    • Hook size choice: Depending on the pattern and size, different hook sizes have different behaviors. For instance, using a smaller hook (e.g. size 6) vs a larger one can affect hooking efficiency and risk of damage.

    • Rig strength: While the rig is strong, using very stiff mainline / boom and managing casts is important to avoid breakage at weak links (like crimps or poor knots).

    • Reusability planning: If you want to reuse rigs a lot, buying hook sections may be more cost-effective than ready-tied rigs, but requires some rig-tying / crimp skill.

    Korda Spinner Rig x3 - Full Range Available - Any 3 for £13.99

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      What Is the Spinner Rig? The Spinner Rig is a very efficient carp rig, especially used “on the deck” (i.e.,... Read more

      £13.99

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        Description


        What Is the Spinner Rig?

        • The Spinner Rig is a very efficient carp rig, especially used “on the deck” (i.e., laying on the lakebed). 

        • It uses a 5.5″ boom (i.e., a stiff link / hooklink of fixed length) for good presentation and to maintain the hookbait away from the weight. 

        • A Spinner swivel is crimped onto one end of that boom to attach the hook. The swivel gives the hook freedom to rotate / move, improving hooking performance. 

        • At the other end of the boom, there’s a crimped loop, which makes it compatible with “quick-change” lead systems (so you can detach or reattach the rig easily). 

        • The rig is designed to be re-used: you can change the hook (or hooklink section) without retying the entire rig. 


         


        Sizes and Hook Options (Barbed / Barbless)

        Spinner Hook Version

        • Available sizes: 4, 5, 6,for the hook itself. 

        • For the ready-tied rig (Spinner Hook version), Korda offers size 5 (exclusive for the Spinner Hook pattern). 

        • Both barbed and barbless versions are available. 

        • The hook has a 55-degree eye angle, which is deliberate: this helps the hook seat properly when the rig is used with a buoyant bait (like pop-up) and a “kicker,” giving a good hooking geometry. 

        • The shank is long and curved, which opens up the gape (i.e. gives more room to hook) when it's used with the Spinner swivel. 

        • Hooks have a PTFE coating, which makes them durable, slick, and helps in penetration. 


         


        Ready-Tied vs Hook Sections vs DIY Rig

        • Ready-tied Spinner Rigs: Korda offers pre-built rigs where the boom, swivel, and hook are already assembled. These are made “exactly the same way as any of [Korda’s] top anglers would do it.”

        • Hook Sections: Alternatively, they sell Spinner Hook Sections, which are just the hook + swivel (pre-crimped). You can attach those to your own boom. 

        • DIY / Tied by Hand: You can also tie your own using Korda’s recommended method. Korda provides a step-by-step guide on how to tie the Spinner Rig. 


        Strengths & Design Rationale

        Why the Spinner Rig works very well:

        1. Efficient hooking geometry: The 55° eye angle + curved shank helps the hook to sit properly and present a good gape when attached to the swivel. 

        2. Reduced tangling: Because of the swivel and the way the boom is constructed, the hook can move freely, reducing the chance of tangles on the cast.

        3. Versatility in hook choice: With three hook patterns (Spinner, Krank, Kurv) and barbed or barbless options, you can tailor the rig to fishing conditions / venue rules.

        4. Quick-change compatibility: The crimped loop allows the rig to be used with quick-change lead systems, which means rigs can be replaced or changed without retying the entire boom. 

        5. Reusability: You don’t always have to throw the whole rig away — swap out the hook section if needed. 

        6. Durability: Pre-crimped swivel and good quality boom material ensures high strength; PTFE coating on hooks for longevity. 


        Considerations / Trade-Offs (Especially for Barbless)

        • Barbless vs Barbed: Barbless hooks are often preferred for fish welfare and for venues with barbless-only rules. However, some anglers feel they lose more fish with barbless due to less hold, so you need to manage pressure / play fish well. (General angling trade-off; anecdotal discussion exists in community – e.g., see some barbless-hook-losing fish discussions.) 

        • Hook size choice: Depending on the pattern and size, different hook sizes have different behaviors. For instance, using a smaller hook (e.g. size 6) vs a larger one can affect hooking efficiency and risk of damage.

        • Rig strength: While the rig is strong, using very stiff mainline / boom and managing casts is important to avoid breakage at weak links (like crimps or poor knots).

        • Reusability planning: If you want to reuse rigs a lot, buying hook sections may be more cost-effective than ready-tied rigs, but requires some rig-tying / crimp skill.

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