Breakdown
Breakdown describes how a bait softens and releases its components in water.
It is a key factor in bait activity, leakage, and overall performance.
What is breakdown
Breakdown is the process by which a bait loses structure when exposed to water.
It involves softening, expansion, and gradual release of particles and soluble components.
Phases of breakdown
Breakdown happens in stages rather than all at once.
Initial phase:
• Water penetrates the outer layer
• Surface begins to soften
Intermediate phase:
• Internal structure weakens
• Particles start to loosen
Final phase:
• Bait opens up
• Maximum release of components
Surface vs internal breakdown
Surface breakdown:
• Affects the outer layer
• Controls early leakage
Internal breakdown:
• Affects the core of the bait
• Determines long-term behaviour
Both must be balanced for consistent performance.
Controlled vs uncontrolled breakdown
Controlled breakdown:
• Gradual softening
• Consistent leakage
• Stable performance
Uncontrolled breakdown:
• Rapid collapse
• Loss of structure
• Inconsistent behaviour
The goal is controlled breakdown — active but stable.
What controls breakdown
Breakdown is influenced by multiple factors:
• Binders → control structural strength
• Birdfoods → create weak points
• Solubles → accelerate breakdown
• Liquids → affect hydration
• Processing → boiling and drying
It is always the result of interaction, not a single ingredient.
Effect on bait performance
Breakdown defines how a bait behaves over time.
Fast breakdown:
• High activity
• Strong early attraction
• Short lifespan
Slow breakdown:
• Lower initial activity
• Sustained performance
• Longer durability
Common mistakes
Breakdown problems often come from imbalance.
Common mistakes include:
• Too many solubles → bait collapses
• Too many binders → bait stays inactive
• Poor texture → inconsistent breakdown
• Incorrect processing → unstable structure
Balancing breakdown
Breakdown must be balanced with structure and leakage.
It should work together with:
• Binding strength → stability
• Birdfoods → texture
• Solubles → activity
• Hardness → resistance
The goal is predictable, controlled behaviour.
In Boilie Maker Studio
Breakdown is analyzed as a dynamic behaviour over time.
The system evaluates:
• Structural stability
• Solubility
• Texture
• Interaction with water
This allows prediction of how a bait opens up and performs during fishing.