



Let me know what you think....


BMX Bassin wrote:Congrats!!! Pretty awesome!!!! Was it a catch and release mount?
who cares?? what kind of response is that?? I was just curious if someone could do that good of a mount job from pictures.Brian wrote:BMX Bassin wrote:Congrats!!! Pretty awesome!!!! Was it a catch and release mount?
Who Cares? Great looking mount either way. Good job.
who cares.......... Its Beautiful ......BMX Bassin wrote:Congrats!!! Pretty awesome!!!! Was it a catch and release mount?
What he said and AWESOME!!!!!BILLYS wrote:Congrats!!!!! If it was me, I would still have a smile on my face.
to answer your question yes! My roomate has a 11plus replica, and it looks unreal! No pun intended..BMX Bassin wrote:who cares?? what kind of response is that?? I was just curious if someone could do that good of a mount job from pictures.Brian wrote:BMX Bassin wrote:Congrats!!! Pretty awesome!!!! Was it a catch and release mount?
Who Cares? Great looking mount either way. Good job.
BMX Bassin wrote:Thanks for a real response G! Some of these other guys... well.... nevermind. I just wanted to know if that was done from pictures because it a great looking mount.
Thanks Slayer, and congrats on a fish of a lifetime! Thats exactly the info I was looking for. If get a One that big (or close)I will be sure to get a bunch of pics so I can have it done. BigBassWorks has one post and decides to PM me and say "get a life Wakeboarder"......wow, what a loser.492slayer wrote:Mike, it is a replica. I released the fish back unharmed. I think Advanced does the best work I've seen. As far as no smile in the picture... I just got off work after 14 hours last night, took the pics at 3:00am today with my digital camera on timer. I didn't know when the pic was going to take so I had a dazed look on my face. They can recreate any fish you have caught just by sending in photos and measurements.
BMX Bassin wrote:Thanks Slayer, and congrats on a fish of a lifetime! Thats exactly the info I was looking for. If get a One that big (or close)I will be sure to get a bunch of pics so I can have it done. BigBassWorks has one post and decides to PM me and say "get a life Wakeboarder"......wow, what a loser.492slayer wrote:Mike, it is a replica. I released the fish back unharmed. I think Advanced does the best work I've seen. As far as no smile in the picture... I just got off work after 14 hours last night, took the pics at 3:00am today with my digital camera on timer. I didn't know when the pic was going to take so I had a dazed look on my face. They can recreate any fish you have caught just by sending in photos and measurements.
BMX Bassin wrote:Thanks Slayer, and congrats on a fish of a lifetime! Thats exactly the info I was looking for. If get a One that big (or close)I will be sure to get a bunch of pics so I can have it done. BigBassWorks has one post and decides to PM me and say "get a life Wakeboarder"......wow, what a loser.492slayer wrote:Mike, it is a replica. I released the fish back unharmed. I think Advanced does the best work I've seen. As far as no smile in the picture... I just got off work after 14 hours last night, took the pics at 3:00am today with my digital camera on timer. I didn't know when the pic was going to take so I had a dazed look on my face. They can recreate any fish you have caught just by sending in photos and measurements.
I didn't have my camera or scale the night I released a 27.5 inch x 20 inch bass in Clear Lake.GregD wrote:Hi Greg,
Do to variations is fish shapes, I don't think you're going to find a "calculator" that will get any more accurate than the two you showed. Especially when the fish is 28" long.
If the calculator is 1 lb off the true weight of a 15 lb fish, you've got almost 7% error. I'm sure the error could be as much s 10% or more on and odd shapped fish.
Greg
Using that formula, the above measurements equal 16.02 (rounded).Another common option used for estimating bass weights is: Girth (in inches)-squared, times length (in inches) divided by 800. A 22" long bass with a girth of 15" weighs about 6.2 pounds using this formula.
Got to agree there, bass are lumpy492slayer wrote:I'd say a fish like a salmon or striper would probably be more acurate as the dimensions are generally more uniform...
492slayer wrote: I weighed it on my Rapala hand scale and it was 14lbs 15oz. Kinda makes you wonder if some of the fish that weighed 10-11lbs on my handheld were not closer to 12lbs.
Wait a minute, are you saying you have caught multiple fish over 10 lbs? Now I do hate you492slayer wrote:Greg, It would be nice to think that it might have weighed 16.77 on one calculator, but on the scale with the seal from the county dept of weights and measurements it was 15.48. I weighed it on my Rapala hand scale and it was 14lbs 15oz. Kinda makes you wonder if some of the fish that weighed 10-11lbs on my handheld were not closer to 12lbs. You can definately get real close with the calculators, but remember also that if you are not exact with the length and girth the way these calculations are set, you could be off quite a bit. I think it's pretty easy to get the length, but there can be a lot of variances in girth. It all depends on where you put the string. I'd say a fish like a salmon or striper would probably be more acurate as the dimensions are generally more uniform. I don't have any problems with the questions, and take no offense. It's all about sportsmanship and learning stuff to me.
I noticed that too but I won't give anyone the satisfaction of answering yes to that question.FishaHallic wrote:Wait a minute, are you saying you have caught multiple fish over 10 lbs? Now I do hate you