I’ve experienced this many seasons. Bait sets were the ticket one season while post sets and flat sets were the better catch rate the next. I always run at least a pair of sets at each location and one is always a bait dirthole other will be a post set and if a third it’s a flat set. If the locations warrant I also like a couple snares for good measure.
I don’t get to trap very long most years so my catch rate needs to be good. The snares have saved my butt on catches many times too. Rainy, frozen and muddy conditions some years I was really glad I had the snares out. One year my best location during season of heavy rain and lots of mud was a simple log crossing. I caught more coyotes off of that log with snares than at any other set of location on my line. Originally set it for cats but after coyote #3 it was starting to be obvious what we needed for snare type and loop size and height there. That one log was a winner over any coyote set I had out that season and was a total fluke I even put a snare there in first place. But it was a good way for animals to cross the swollen creek.
Same on my coon line I run a mix of footholds, DPs, cages, and 220s or 160s. Bait sets, blind sets, and body grips and cages. Had em go right by DPs to end up in a 220, and was glad I had the variety of tools an sets.
I’m a firm believer in a variety of sets and tools at locations and that helps my catch rates.
Jim