The stock hooks are sharp.They do need straightened out or you'll lose more fish. Most straighten out with a small set of needlenose pliers.Most of the time,1 tine of the belly treble will break off but it'll be ok for a while.
Channelcats wreck havoc on them.Especially when they drawstring them which renders their upper and lower jaws clamped shut.I've turned a few into hairlips because of that. Pretty much 1/4 of them will be blinded in 1 eye because of all their thrashing and flipping. When the action heats up, I'll replace them daily when they break.
They'll still work if hooks are bent/beaten up as long as you keep them opened up. Just keep bending them until they break. Walmart -eagle claws- and very sharp. I've got some red eagle claw lasers but never caught anything on them.
The best part,those hooks break off/straighten out on major snags. I've pulled in a pair of 21# flatties and no issue with their hook strength.Since switching to 5 cm flickershads,I've slashed my lost crank stats after switching to snaps and trilene knot.20 lost cranks per season was par before flickershads.Not counting 2 that broke,but I lost 5 on snags and 1 when the snap opened up.No biggie because all of their colors are easily replaceable.They are cheaply built but they are a game changer!!!!
Half will be out of tune out of the packs. Pick up a few sets of those $1 pack jeweler screwdrivers and use the 2 smallest ones to re-tune them.The eye is a wire and doesn't take much pressure to bend it/ over bend it.The eye will pop up out of the lip at times.Just push down with needlenose and superglue it back and it'll work for a while.Sometimes I can catch 100 fish on 1 without retuning then catch 4 or 5 and retune. These have to run true for top results.Test them at 3-4 mph with a few feet of line released.No good if they slightly track left or right.When properly tuned,your crank should be able to go 5+ mph without surfacing.Gotta have them 100% track true!!!!!