Free: Contests & Raffles.
Is it a Hancock or is it one of those Koros that is missing some of the locks. I have heard Koro put out some like that and they allow beavers to get out.
The Koros don't have the locks because the springs were made stronger than the Hancocks and they don't need locks. Beaver can't get out of them unless something breaks or something ends up between the jaws. Do not 'dry fire' these traps or the springs will break much sooner than they would otherwise (like a hunting bow). Close them down slowly, just like you set them only backwards.
Mike and I have caught well over 100 beaver in Koro/Hancocks over the last couple of years:Sometimes muskrat set them off and you find an empty trap. We recently found a big muskrat drowned in a closed trap, caught by the hip in the chain link when he tried to escapeMike added cable to the trap frame corners to keep the chain link tight so smaller beaver can't squeeze out. I'll ask him to bring one to the rendezvous Trap springs eventually break and the chain link eventually breaks. If a beaver escapes it will leave a lot of hair where it squeezed outThe Hancock locks actually cause more problems for us because they can get in the way of the closing trap jaw and bounce it back. We have to shim twigs under them to keep them clear
Quote from: UrbanTrapper on February 05, 2016, 09:46:29 PMThe Koros don't have the locks because the springs were made stronger than the Hancocks and they don't need locks. Beaver can't get out of them unless something breaks or something ends up between the jaws. Do not 'dry fire' these traps or the springs will break much sooner than they would otherwise (like a hunting bow). Close them down slowly, just like you set them only backwards.I have heard reports to the contrary. People are having trouble with beaver getting out of these traps.