Collection: Wire Leader

Wire leader for king mackerel, wahoo, and other toothy fish. Choose single strand or cable depending on the bite and your rigging style. Wire prevents cut offs and keeps baits in the water longer, especially on fast trolling spreads.

FAQ - Wire Leader

1. Single strand or cable wire - which is better?

Single strand is stiff and clean for trolling. Cable is more flexible and better for knots and crimps. Use cable for heavy rigs and single strand for clean, straight pulls.

2. Do I need wire for king mackerel?

Yes. Kings will cut mono fast. Use a wire leader or a pre rigged king rig.

3. What pound test wire should I use for wahoo?

Most crews run 60 to 100 lb wire or cable depending on lure size. Pair it with a wahoo shock leader to prevent cut offs.

4. How do I connect wire to mono?

Use a small barrel swivel or a proper crimp and sleeve. Our crimping guide shows the clean method.

5. Will wire reduce bites?

Wire can be more visible in clear water, but it saves fish. If the bite is picky, shorten the wire section or use a shock leader only.

6. Do I need special cutters for wire?

Yes. Use quality cutters or a dedicated cable cutter so you do not crush the wire.

How to Choose Wire Leaders

Use wire for toothy fish. Kings and wahoo will cut mono and fluoro. A short wire leader keeps your lure in the water and saves expensive baits.

Pick the right wire type. Single strand wire is stiff and tracks straight, which is great for high speed trolling. Cable is more flexible and works well with crimps. If you are building heavy rigs, cable is usually the safest choice.

Keep it short and clean. A short wire section keeps drag down and lets the lure work. For kings, use a pre rigged option like Blue Water Candy king rigs. For wahoo, add a shock leader ahead of the lure.

Crimp it right. Use proper sleeves and a clean crimp. If the wire slips, the sleeve is too large. Follow the steps in our crimping guide.