Here's the thing. . .
People that tell you that you need to (dip) a snare to make it a color. . . are the ones selling you the product to do it !
The biggest seller of such products told me to my face, that he personally didn't believe it, but would tell every trapper how well it works, in an attempt to sell the product !
Now, you believe what you want to.
You only have to tell me ONCE !
Voodoo exist in 'the mind'. . .
Shiny snares catch ( some) animals.
They will also miss some, because some animals clearly see the shine and the circle and avoid it !
Coyotes are masters at this. They can also spot a colored snare !
Do you think African poachers color snares ?
Look at the pile of wire snares removed by the 'game wardens'. THE ANSWER IS NO !
When you dip a snare , it must be 'ultra thin' or , as some point out, it will gum op the lock.
So...if you going to use a product like that, just do the cable only, then build the snare. Hang up to dry.
You'll be money ahead to do it that way.
Paint, dipped or otherwise can also slow down a lock's speed. Even spray paint, so use sparingly.
Anything you put on the cable can imped a lock's performance !
Now, if you boil cable, ( whether it be in trap dye, natural bark or baking soda )you run the risk of removing the oil from the inside the cable , causing it to rust from the inside -out.
That takes awhile, but keep boiled snares over until next season and you'll then see the damage.
If you have to BOIL snare cable to remove factory oil. . . go to another supplier !!!!!!!!!
If you get oil on your hands, look elsewhere !
Has no one ever heard of DRY cable ?
On a mink snare, I want the mink to see the circle. It gives him a target to jump through,
A raccoon is the same way ! It will try to go through the circle almost every time.
There are times when I want a snare 'blended' which are most coyote snares, so if it is a color I seek, I take my cable and bury it inside a pile of wet oak leaves, which allows the tannic acid to 'bleed' off on the cable, staining it the exact color of the leaf, WITHOUT adding a layer, like dip or paint will.
More natural that anything out there.
A ferrule or a lock can be 'hit' with a quick shot of camo if it remains shiny, but soaking them in vinegar will cure that problem overnight !
I could tell you something different, but I don't have anything to sell you.