Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: MChewk]
#5819502
02/19/17 02:13 PM
02/19/17 02:13 PM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036 Georgia
yote65Ga
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036
Georgia
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I always thought the # 2 Newhouse would be a great all around trap....might change out chain or add a swivel. I agree. That is why I'm stocking up on Sleepy Creek #2 double longs. They are the only brand that sells that size trap any more. At least the only ones the supply companies sell. I've bought some Victor #2's that I will probably use for mink and coon. The only thing I don't care for on the older style traps is the wobbly pan. I see that as an issue when canine trapping. I've found PIT pan kits for the #3 Victor and Blake & Lamb double longsprings but not the #2's.
Jim
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Snares&All]
#5819878
02/19/17 08:44 PM
02/19/17 08:44 PM
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,627 Flint, Michigan
bhugo
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,627
Flint, Michigan
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I love my # 4 Blake and lamb long springs for coyotes. Previous owner laminated them, baseplated and center swiveled them. I messed around with the pans cutting grooves in the notch and the dog to give it some tension. I'm going to put pit pans on them after seeing all the beauties on this thread.
I also have a few 3 and 4 victors that are ancient. Strong springs and no mods. They work great too.
I use 11's and 2's Coon and water trapping. Some are b and l and some victors. The b and l are real strong.
The old Blake and lamb #1's single springs I have are amazing springs! Best Coon trap ever for me except for dog proofs?
I use coils too but see few advantages. Maybe easier to carry more in a pack basket. Cheaper to buy initially. Not as tough as a dbl in my opinion.
I also use jumps for everything too. I really like them. I'm going to put new pans on them too.
Member MTPCA, FTA and NTA
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Snares&All]
#5822407
02/22/17 12:43 AM
02/22/17 12:43 AM
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Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 1,781 Mi, Mecosta
ambush32
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 1,781
Mi, Mecosta
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I love dbls, they hold tight....anyone have any suggestions on an easy release of an animal that is in the dbls? Like a #4, I wanted to release a red from a dbls it was a pain...so he want home with me...
Thought I was a good trapper until I started trapping coyotes...... Thought I was a good bowhunter until I targeted mature bucks....
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: ambush32]
#5822503
02/22/17 07:52 AM
02/22/17 07:52 AM
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Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 5,022 central arkansas
the Blak Spot
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 5,022
central arkansas
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I love dbls, they hold tight....anyone have any suggestions on an easy release of an animal that is in the dbls? Like a #4, I wanted to release a red from a dbls it was a pain...so he want home with me... I think sterling fur sells these. Jiffy longspring setter
the just shall live by faith
member FTA, ATA, EAFT 1776 - the year we told a tyrant we weren't to be under a dictator Caveat ater macula
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Snares&All]
#5824368
02/23/17 07:26 PM
02/23/17 07:26 PM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036 Georgia
yote65Ga
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036
Georgia
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Those of you that have taken the chain off of the spring end of the double longsprings and moved it to the center, or close to it, of the base plate area...did you have issues with the chain on the spring? Did it cause swiveling problems or tangle issues? Do you think moving the chain to the center of the base plate had a large advantage or just a slight advantage?
I get the advantage on a more square jaw trap, but not on a round jaw trap.
Jim
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Snares&All]
#5824654
02/23/17 10:17 PM
02/23/17 10:17 PM
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Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 5,088 montana
red mt
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 5,088
montana
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Grey 55 I like it on the spring they bed nicer I agree its a square jaw issue , and centering up chain I do not think it hurts or helps
Kenneth schoening
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: yote65Ga]
#5824869
02/24/17 05:27 AM
02/24/17 05:27 AM
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,627 Flint, Michigan
bhugo
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,627
Flint, Michigan
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Those of you that have taken the chain off of the spring end of the double longsprings and moved it to the center, or close to it, of the base plate area...did you have issues with the chain on the spring? Did it cause swiveling problems or tangle issues? Do you think moving the chain to the center of the base plate had a large advantage or just a slight advantage?
I get the advantage on a more square jaw trap, but not on a round jaw trap. I haven't seen a different on chain placement.
Member MTPCA, FTA and NTA
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Snares&All]
#5824878
02/24/17 06:02 AM
02/24/17 06:02 AM
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Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 8,940 Firth, Nebraska
jabNE
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 8,940
Firth, Nebraska
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I center mine, most of my longs came with crappy twin loop which I swapped out for welded straight or twist link chain anyway, didn't like the spring clevis so center mounted them like most coils come now. Nothing bound up more than twin loop even with swivels and machine chain flows out of the bed much smoother. The springs rarely stayed straight out to each side after a catch, always seems to fold in anyway tight like a coil, so I just started center mounting to the base and seemed to have less issues with first swivel point especially on incidental coon. It also shortened up distance on water traps for me on drowners by moving to center and just a few links of chain to end swivel drowner. If on end of spring I had to allow for length of the spring too plus chain needed deeper water to drown. Put a stick in the jaws of long and keep the clevis spring attachment, hang the chain up and spin the trap, the stick stays straight out as it spins...Do same with center mounted long...Stick hangs straight down opposite chain as it spins...It's a more direct rotation on swivel point and less stress on legs and feet trust me. Jim
Money cannot buy you happiness, but it can buy you a trapping license and that's pretty close.
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: jabNE]
#5824888
02/24/17 06:42 AM
02/24/17 06:42 AM
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Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 5,022 central arkansas
the Blak Spot
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 5,022
central arkansas
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I center mine, most of my longs came with crappy twin loop which I swapped out for welded straight or twist link chain anyway, didn't like the spring clevis so center mounted them like most coils come now. Nothing bound up more than twin loop even with swivels and machine chain flows out of the bed much smoother. The springs rarely stayed straight out to each side after a catch, always seems to fold in anyway tight like a coil, so I just started center mounting to the base and seemed to have less issues with first swivel point especially on incidental coon. It also shortened up distance on water traps for me on drowners by moving to center and just a few links of chain to end swivel drowner. If on end of spring I had to allow for length of the spring too plus chain needed deeper water to drown. Put a stick in the jaws of long and keep the clevis spring attachment, hang the chain up and spin the trap, the stick stays straight out as it spins...Do same with center mounted long...Stick hangs straight down opposite chain as it spins...It's a more direct rotation on swivel point and less stress on legs and feet trust me. Jim X2
the just shall live by faith
member FTA, ATA, EAFT 1776 - the year we told a tyrant we weren't to be under a dictator Caveat ater macula
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: red mt]
#5824966
02/24/17 08:35 AM
02/24/17 08:35 AM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036 Georgia
yote65Ga
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036
Georgia
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Grey 55 I like it on the spring they bed nicer I agree its a square jaw issue , and centering up chain I do not think it hurts or helps This is why I am reluctant to center swivel. The ground that I trap mostly right now is rocky and its all I can do to get a trap bed in let a lone bury a longer chain under the trap. I usually go with a shorter chain and side swivel so that I can place the chain in front of the trap in the bed instead of underneath it. The way the chain is attached to the longspring trap from the factory gives me options. I can slide it along the spring on the clevis to conform to whatever bedding situation that I find myself in.
Jim
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: jabNE]
#5824975
02/24/17 08:46 AM
02/24/17 08:46 AM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036 Georgia
yote65Ga
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036
Georgia
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I center mine, most of my longs came with crappy twin loop which I swapped out for welded straight or twist link chain anyway, didn't like the spring clevis so center mounted them like most coils come now. Nothing bound up more than twin loop even with swivels and machine chain flows out of the bed much smoother. The springs rarely stayed straight out to each side after a catch, always seems to fold in anyway tight like a coil, so I just started center mounting to the base and seemed to have less issues with first swivel point especially on incidental coon. It also shortened up distance on water traps for me on drowners by moving to center and just a few links of chain to end swivel drowner. If on end of spring I had to allow for length of the spring too plus chain needed deeper water to drown. Put a stick in the jaws of long and keep the clevis spring attachment, hang the chain up and spin the trap, the stick stays straight out as it spins...Do same with center mounted long...Stick hangs straight down opposite chain as it spins...It's a more direct rotation on swivel point and less stress on legs and feet trust me. Jim I get what you are saying but don't know if it would work here for me. I will probably try some center swiveled just to experiment and see how it goes. It actually seems to me that a center swiveled double longspring trap would kind of function like blades of a propeller with the springs catching on everything in site as the trap and animal is swiveling around and around. I trust you guys though as you have been doing it a long time so I will give it a try on some sets. I think it also depends on what your target is. A coyote especially would probably benefit from center swiveling more than say a coon as they are a larger animal and stand higher off of the ground so the trap would probably not come in contact with the ground duff like a coon would. It is interesting that the number 1.5 trap is usually used for coon more than anything else and most of those traps are side swiveled. A lot to think about.
Jim
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Snares&All]
#5825020
02/24/17 09:14 AM
02/24/17 09:14 AM
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Joined: Apr 2016
Posts: 3,517 South Alabama
Boy Named Sue
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2016
Posts: 3,517
South Alabama
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Thank you for your replies on threes or fours. Its a personnel preference thing, I was just curious what others thought. I base plated a few traps with a center swivel. My chain set up is only about fourteen inches long, and it made it difficult to reset the trap over my knee after a catch. With the chain at the end of the spring there is plenty of length.
"Common sense is always the least common of sense."
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Snares&All]
#5825055
02/24/17 09:45 AM
02/24/17 09:45 AM
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Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 5,022 central arkansas
the Blak Spot
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 5,022
central arkansas
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One down side i see to center swivel on a longspring is when using drags an animal could go between to small saplings, get the springs up against the saplings and pull the springs down enough to escape
the just shall live by faith
member FTA, ATA, EAFT 1776 - the year we told a tyrant we weren't to be under a dictator Caveat ater macula
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Boy Named Sue]
#5826178
02/25/17 08:35 AM
02/25/17 08:35 AM
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Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,627 Flint, Michigan
bhugo
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 2,627
Flint, Michigan
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Thank you for your replies on threes or fours. Its a personnel preference thing, I was just curious what others thought. I base plated a few traps with a center swivel. My chain set up is only about fourteen inches long, and it made it difficult to reset the trap over my knee after a catch. With the chain at the end of the spring there is plenty of length. I use short chains too. That is a definite advantage to leaving the chain on the spring. I use a setter to reset the center swiveled traps because of the short chains.
Member MTPCA, FTA and NTA
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Re: The great double longspring thread!
[Re: Govtrapper]
#5826254
02/25/17 09:19 AM
02/25/17 09:19 AM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036 Georgia
yote65Ga
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,036
Georgia
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I'm a longspring man. I'm still using alot of the old #4newhoust an McBride. Also I've been still using the old victors for coyotes. I still use dragssome so It doesn't take much more to bed a longspring for me Govtrapper...Do you center swivel or do you leave the swivel on the spring?
Jim
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