Berkley Choppo Topwater Prop Bait
CA$16.99
1 in stock
Description
Berkley Choppo Family Technical Specifications Matrix
| Model / Size | Body Length | Weight Class | Hook Hardware Spec | Primary Target Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Choppo 90 | 3.5 inches / 90 mm | 1/2 oz (~14.1 grams) | Two #4 Fusion19 Trebles | The Gold Standard All-Rounder / Bass & Pike Search |
| Choppo 105 | 4.25 inches / 105 mm | 3/4 oz (~21.2 grams) | Two #3 Fusion19 Trebles | Open Basin Trolling / Heavy Wind Chop Chopping |
| Choppo 120 | 4.75 inches / 120 mm | 1.0 oz (~28.3 grams) | Two #2 Fusion19 Trebles | Magnum Power Target / Trophy Bass, Monster Pike & Musky |
The Cupped Propeller Tail Engineering: Weaponized Surface Acoustics
Standard topwater walking baits require continuous, exhausting rod manipulation to maintain their action, often leading to missed hooks when slackline bites occur. The Berkley Choppo completely re-engineers surface search tactics. Built around a durable, aerodynamic hard plastic chassis, its technical soul lies in the overbuilt molded cupped propeller tail. Unlike fragile metal prop lures that easily bend out of alignment upon hitting rocks, the Choppo’s tail is molded from a rugged, semi-flexible polymer that retains its factory-calibrated balance through infinite high-impact collisions and aggressive predator strikes.
When retrieved, the tail blade catches water resistance and rotates rapidly around a heavy-duty stainless steel axle wire. This mechanical rotation forces the cup to continuously slam into the surface film, outputting a loud, deep-frequency, hollow “plop-plop-plop” sound trail. This acoustic displacement broadcasts directly downward through the water column, provoking reactionary strikes from ambush predators staged deep within dense grass cover or under structural dock shade lines.
Pro Guide: Line Buoyancy Mechanics and Heavy Winching Rig Setup
- The Ultimate Choppo Outfit: For casting the standard 90 and 120 sizes, run a 7’0″ to 7’6″ **Medium-Heavy power baitcasting rod** with a Fast tip but a progressive graphite blank. The rod must possess enough tip speed to sling the heavy frame long distances, combined with a powerful backbone to drive the heavy-wire hooks home and winch big fish away from dense vegetation cover.
- The Absolute Flotation Line Mandate: Spool up with a main line of 30–50 lb premium Braided line tied directly to the front nose line tie. Braided line floats completely on the surface film, keeping the nose of the Choppo riding high for instant tail engagement. Never fish this lure on straight Fluorocarbon line; fluorocarbon is highly dense and sinks, acting as an anchor that drags the nose downward, ruining the prop rotation and killing the acoustic signature. If you must use a leader, run a short 12-inch section of heavy 20lb Monofilament.
- Fusion19 Structural Hook Matrix: Rigged with custom, ultra-sharp round-bend **Berkley Fusion19 treble hooks**. The black nickel finish reduces water reflection, while the sticky-sharp needle points ensure instantaneous skin penetration even when a fast-moving pike or bass strikes blindly out of pure territory defense.
3 Tactical Retrieval Methods for Open Basins and Weedlines
- The Straight Steady Burn (The Search Blueprint): Cast long distances over the tops of submerged weed flats or shallow reefs. Maintain a steady, medium-to-fast reel recovery pace. The Choppo will throw a massive forward bubble spray and a distinct acoustic trail, serving as the ultimate search tool to map out active schools across large water areas.
- The Rip-Stall-Rip Reaction Trap: When crawling the bait parallel to thick emergent reed walls or lily pad patches, apply a sudden horizontal rod sweep to make the tail violently chug and spray water, then **stop your reel handle entirely for 1.5 seconds**. Cautious trailing monsters often swallow the bait the exact millisecond it stalls.
- The Choppy-Water Trolling Scurry: On windy afternoons when heavy surface wave ripples drown out standard walking baits, deploy the large Choppo 120 behind a tracking boat at 2.0 to 2.5 mph, letting the heavy 1oz weight chop through the surface waves.
Frequently Asked Questions About Berkley Choppo
Q1: How do I choose between Berkley Choppo Size 90 vs. Size 120?
A: Base your size selection on wind conditions, forage scale, and your target species. The Choppo 90 (3.5″, 1/2 oz) serves as the ultimate all-rounder gold standard size, perfectly matching standard shad or shiner hatches on calm mornings and handled easily by standard medium-heavy casting rods. Upgrade to the Magnum Choppo 120 (4.75″, 1 oz) when fishing heavy wind chops, when matching mature adult ciscoes, or when explicitly targeting trophy-class Pike, Musky, and giant basin Bass.
Q2: What is the benefit of the plastic cupped tail over traditional metal prop blades?
A: Traditional metal prop blades bend easily out of shape when they accidentally hit a rock reef or concrete dock piling, locking up the bait and ruining its symmetry. The Berkley Choppo utilizes a high-impact, semi-flexible molded plastic tail matrix that absorbs punishment, bouncing back to its original shape instantly to guarantee 100% straight tracking and flawless sound output out of the box.
Q3: Can I fish the Berkley Choppo effectively on a Fluorocarbon line?
A: No, absolutely not. Fluorocarbon line is dense and sinks, which will pull the nose of the Choppo downward under the water surface. This sinking force chokes the rotation axle of the propeller tail, completely killing its signature plopping acoustics. To preserve the ideal horizontal surface-tracking angle, always fish the Choppo on a floating Braided line or high-poundage Monofilament line.


Reviews
There are no reviews yet.