i post this question after seeing a couple other barners using them.
i do not.
i do not.
I realize it's a different story than regular steel hooks, but when underwater isn't stainless no longer protected by the oxide layer because it is not able to form, so it will therefore rust, even though possibly more slowly? I was under the impression the stainless needed to be in the presence of more freely available oxygen, like in the air, for the oxide layer to develop.
I was thinking the same but wasn't going to say anything until you did. As a diver I see and and sometimes get snagged in quite a few OLD rigs with marine growth on them. The hooks although rusty are still there and still quite strong. These rigs are at least a full season old and some maybe a year. What most here don't realize is that oxidation occurs at a much slower rate under water than in the air. The "rust away" is more of a makes you feel good than actuality. Just how good is something rusting away inside a living animal?l It would seem to me a non corrosive alloy to be less harmful. When doctors do implants don't they use stainless and titanium?Not trying to be a smart a$$ but did anyone ever put a hook in salt water and see how long it takes to rust out. What does a short time mean ,two days, two weeks?