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Mepps Musky Killer Spinner 15 g
Mepps Musky Killer Spinner 15 g
Mepps Musky Killer Spinner 15 g Gold
Gold
   

Mepps Musky Killer Spinner 15 g

P-18760.2

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€15.90 *

Prices incl. VAT plus shipping costs

Mepps Musky Killer Spinner 15 g

Spinners are a classic lure but have lost nothing of their catchability and effectiveness over the years. To catch the huge pikes, Mepps has developed the Musky Killer. The spinner has an extra-large silhouette and creates strong pressure waves underwater, magically attracting fish from long distances.

The large spinner blade creates pressure waves that only a spinner can create. This makes the lure especially suitable in murky water as an excellent search lure and can be fished very variable at different depths. But also, in clear water the Musky Killer is a catch guarantor. The bucktail not only protects the hook from weeds and minimizes the risk of snagging, but also significantly increases the silhouette of the lure.

The combination of the powerful pressure waves and the large silhouette ensures that the Musky Killer catches big pike all over the world and has become one of the most popular lures for musky fishing in the USA, because hardly any other lure catches as many big fish as the good old spinner.

Details:

  • Classic lure for extra-large pike
  • Spinner with large silhouette and powerful pressure waves
  • Bucktail on the hook enlarges the lure and protects against snags
  • Excellent for clear and murky water
  • Weight: 15 g
  • Running depth: Variable
About Mepps:

Every angler is likely to stumble across this name rather sooner than later. No wonder, because the traditional lures do not only have a long history of success behind them, they are still incredibly effective and fill countless tackle boxes today. As early as 1938, French engineer Andre Meulnard invented the first spinner, which utilized a small metal blade rotating around its own axis. The lure was deadly effective, but he could not yet foresee how much this small lure would revolutionize the fishing industry. It wasn't until after World War II that American Todd Sheldon got his hands on the lure in 1951. A soldier brought the spinner from Europe back to Wisconsin in his home country, where it quickly became a huge success. Today, the small metal lures hang in fishing stores around the world in all shapes, sizes and colors, true to the original principle.