Fellas, I figure this is as good as place as any to ask this question, I was texting Hammer about this earlier, maybe you all would have some more ideas
In my part of the state we have odd conditions where conventional trapping equipment doesn't work well, particularly 330 stabilizers. Lots of rocky bottoms with mud or sand beneath the rocks. Lots of deep creeks, say waist deep or so. Lots of stream restoration projects in towns where they have placed rip rap and boulders on the bottom.
I feel like if I could set 330's everywhere I wanted to I would be dangerous

Hammer has a rectangle shaped 1/2" rebar flat stabilizer that me and a buddy made some copies of, and it works good if the bottom is perfectly flat, but with these rocks that isn't usually the case. And of course in deeper water it doesn't work, at no fault of the design
H stands work well for me when I can get them in, but often times I need the trap up off the bottom if the water is deeper. I am trying to catch beaver and otter coming down the creeks, they aren't swimming on the bottom as if you are trapping a beaver house/beaver runs, they are swimming along the surface
Even trying to set runs up onto the bank in shallower water the angled rocky banks make things difficult
Has anyone ever made 330 beaver stabilizers similar to how folks make the adjustable muskrat stabilizers?
I am thinking a long 1/2" rebar rod, say 4 foot long or so, with a T handle on the top. A stakilizer system welded to the rod for the trap to clamp down on, or maybe somehow put the stakilizer sandwich system on a wingnut screw platform and slide it up and down the main rod.
This should allow me to find a gap between two rocks and go to town with a 4 pound hammer driving that rod in. And if the water is deep I could raise the trap to just below the surface.
Thoughts on something for this application?