Author Topic: Railroad Plates  (Read 471 times)

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Offline Coniboy

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Railroad Plates
« on: September 06, 2003, 11:32:45 AM »
I found about 20 old rail road plates and would they work for a drowner cable ancor for muskrats and mink?I also put 2, 8" bolts on one for a fox and raccons drag.It was in FFG.

Offline David Underwood

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Railroad Plates
« Reply #1 on: September 06, 2003, 12:52:00 PM »
They work real good for rats and mink.

Offline Dan Mich Trapper

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Railroad Plates
« Reply #2 on: September 06, 2003, 01:20:58 PM »
I would be kinda leary about usin them for coon . They are pretty tough critters .
If an animal activist is being mauled by a bear should we stop it , or , " let nature take its course?"

Offline Jacktheknife

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Railroad Plates
« Reply #3 on: October 10, 2004, 05:38:33 AM »
Rail road plates are good drags for Coyotes even!
I like them better than grappels. Weight ! Is the reason.
Make good anvils too.  And at $90.00 a ton I used to sell them for scrap.
                                                                         Knife
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Offline foxtail

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Railroad Plates
« Reply #4 on: October 19, 2004, 04:53:26 PM »
I use them all of the time.
Now keep in mind that there are several sizes.
There are switch plates which are so heavy that I leave the one I have at the place it is used and use it for coon alone. I really don't like it all that well as I can't toss it far enough to get where I want it. I have to carry it out in the water and drop it where it goes. This one is used for a drowner weight.
There are the regular sized ones which make wonderfull drags when you use 2 of them together on a long (6 foot) chain.

Then there are those baby ones that come off of the small tracks that I don't think anyone uses anymore. They have to be used with care and NEVER just one.

If you use too light of a weight, the coon may take it up in a tree and tangle it up there and that sucks the big one. I have seen a 45lb coon take 2 regular ones up a tree just far enough to make it rather hard to get it out compounded with the fact that we had no gun that day.