Yes to the direction as we watched the video. Wondering about this usage of a pigtail in areas w/o close trees for a support. All the spring loaded snare designs seem to have the same theme, just the spring size is different. Using a Ram you put it anywhere with a stake and its spring is the support. It is expensive and cumbersome (in the truck) but my game cam shows a 2 minute + or - time frame from catch to death, plus you can modify a much more sensitive trigger system than either Lightsout or Senneker for use on a variety of different furbearers. Lightsout and Sennecker are easier to carry and store and cost less. BUT the MECHANICS are the same from this side of the fence unless I am missing something................... the mike...... P.S. that double twist of wire (around) will damage/kill a tree in this area and when you have plenty like you folks do its not and issue. Here where 5 mature trees constitute a State Park its a concern LOL. ............... the mike again
The little kill systems certainly don’t replace the ram, but I only set a handful of rams this winter. For fox & coyote, they’re ok, but for wolf the big Ram Wolf Masters are not the ticket. The S/LO systems can be tweaked so they fire with a lighter pull, but you do not want that. Short snare, no entanglement, and it’s the fastest kill I’ve ever seen. Even a little fox will set off the heaviest trigger.
For open areas, I use a snare support tapped into the ground with a solid anchor, but I rarely snare in the open grassy areas.
The rams kill by keeping pressure on the snare, chew the cable and he’s gone, not so with S/LO. I’ve found em stone dead 50yds away after chewing the cable. The animal starts getting choked, pulls hard enough to set off the trigger (25-30is lb give or take) then the spring cinches it another 4”. But most of the kills the spring is only halfway opened……putting a ton of force on the cinch.
Like I said, that video is old, but it give you an idea how you can use the pigtail. I just use a regular support. Keep my snare short and choked around a solid tree. Not all of mine have barrel swivels, but the ones that do aren’t to keep the animal from twisting the cable, they’re dead way before the cable gets really janked. It’s to help get the loop nice and vertical after choking it around a tree. My snares have a little loop just big enough to feed the spring though and around a tree to anchor……
The mechanics aren’t the same. If that spring fires prematurely, that animal will most likely be dead, just not as humane. I waxed my Lightsout my first year. That was stupid and I didn’t understand how they were supposed to kill, never doing that again.
I’m not proof reading this and I hope auto correct didn’t turn this reply into a fishing story……lol