This heavy duty one ounce spinnerbait has a 6/0 long shank hook and closed loop eye on a stout .040 heavy gauge wire arm.
Green Pumpkin Olive Skirt. Half dark green pumpkin, half olive pumpkin. Both halves mottled with an irregular, non-descript print pattern of black bars and spots. This particular skirt pattern is not available anywhere else, except in Bassdozer's Store.
Willow/Magnum Indiana Blades. Front blade is a gold-plated #5-1/2 Willow. Back blade is a nickel-plated Magnum Indiana blade (#7). Rarely (if ever) seen on bass lures, the Magnum Indiana is usually used on musky & pike spinners. Both these blades are heavy. This specific pairing/spacing emits quite a thump, and is a good choice for lightly-stained water. The two blades blend well into each other's actions. The combined actions appear more like a singular large baitfish body (Willow) and tail (Magnum Indiana) instead of two separate baitfish.
Front blade is gold-plated. Back blade is nickel-plated.
A big, heavy spinnerbait like this is a big bass bait. You will catch less bass - but bigger bass on average - on a big spinnerbait like this. A second bona fide big bass bait is a jig and pig. I often say "blades make a spinnerbait" and "the trailer makes the jig," meaning you will not catch too many bass on a spinnerbait without any blades on it (i.e., blades make the spinnerbait). Nor will you catch too many bass on a skirted jig if it isn't dressed with a trailer (thus, the trailer makes the jig). Where I am going with this is, especially in stained water, always try adding a big pork frog trailer to this big spinnerbait. A green, brown or black pork frog, the bigger the better. So you get the best of both the jig trailer and spinnerbait blades in one combined presentation. How should you fish it, like a jig, or like a spinnerbait? Yes and yes.

The wire arm of a spinnerbait can be as effective a snag deflector as the fiber bundle molded on a jig. This one ounce bait is surprisingly snagless even in some of the densest cover. It will get glopped down in soft weeds (not the best place to use it). However, it excels coming through hard cover like flooded trees while remaining remarkably snagless around tree limbs and trunks. This big one ounce Style B head snags less than most other spinnerbaits (or jigs) in trees and limbs, laydowns and stumps where relatively bigger bass abound.
The price is for one (1) spinnerbait as shown below :