teninchman said:I have not done any cost calculation, but would guess that at my production rate, the savings are marginal. What it does allow me is the flexibility to make almost any spinner configuration I want. I can be as creative and wacky as I dare, with the benefit of throwing something out there that not many fish have seen before. Also, there is a certain satisfaction in catching just as many fish with a homemade lure as with a store bought one. This, for me, is a hobby, and not a way to save money lol. I approach it this way, and have fun doing it.
YMMV
TIM
teninchman said:For inline spinners, if you have all of the supplies (ie - wires, blades, clevices, bodies, beads, o-rings, hooks, etc.) then you could ostensibly get away with a set of needle-nose pliers (with built in wire cutters). For in-line spinners, I personally have needle nose pliers (2 actually), o-ring tool, fly-tying vise and bobbin (for making dressed trebles) and glue.
I think that is all I use lol
TIM