Overwhelming root avoidance vibration
Chinu Koro Vibe is a vibration exclusively for chinning. Black sea bream and kibire are attached to bottom range rocks and breaks and prey on crabs, shellfish and sometimes small fish.
Chinu Koro Vibe has a high appeal to Chinu who is looking for food in shallow, and switches on the predatory instinct with the body shape and rubber that imitates shrimp.
The fishing to show is "Chinukorori". If you use the reaction properly with "Chinukoro Vibe", you can greatly expand the possibilities of chinning.
We have emphasized the following two points during development, so we would like to introduce them.
1) Overwhelming flight distance
We have prepared two types of Chinu Koro Vibes, 8g and 12g. The weight setting is a little lighter than the vibration used in general sea bass, but the unique body shape and exquisite weight balance give an overwhelming flight distance. The more you are really surprised, the better you fly. 8g is equivalent to 10g. 12g will fly further. In addition, the flight attitude is outstandingly stable and it flies straight, so you can reliably approach the target point.
2) Stack avoidance rate
Chinu Koro Vibe is a vibration that inherits the "Okiagari Koboshi" function of "Chinukoro" and boasts an overwhelming root avoidance rate. Even if it gets caught on a rock, the line eye will serve as a fulcrum and the body will lift upward to avoid getting stuck. Also, at the bottom, the lure does not fall and the hook is turned up to land, so it appeals strongly to fish and it is possible to take poses at the bottom that can not be done with conventional vibration. By the way, if you land on the sand and lightly shake the rod, it will dart left and right. It's just like shrimp running away.
With these features, you can aggressively attack points that would take root in general vibration. Specifically, after casting and firmly landing on the bottom, you can get a different reaction of the fish from the time of retrieval by retrieving while feeling the bottom, and occasionally fanning the stop and rod upward. Let's do it.