Egg 34-L19I-I2N6 Sinkers Review
Our verdict
At $8.99 for 26 pieces, the Egg 34-L19I-I2N6 lead egg sinkers work out to about 35 cents each, and a 4.5-star average across 83 reviews with 600+ bought last month says the price is finding a real audience.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Anglers who want a basic bulk supply of egg sinkers for bottom rigs, Carolina rigs, or catfish setups and don't want to pay tungsten prices for a shape they'll lose in snags anyway.
Skip if
Skip this if you fish clear finesse water where lead is restricted, or if you need a specific single weight rather than an assorted 26-piece bag with mixed sizes.
- Material Lead
- Weight 0.35 Kilograms
- Size 26pcs
- Color grey
- Pieces 26
- Feature egg sinker
- Priced 25% below the category median ($11.99 across 91 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.5/5
4.5 average across 83 owner ratings
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Popularity1.0/5
83 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
Bottom fishing for catfish or carp usually means losing a sinker or two per outing, whether to a snag on a rocky bottom or a fish that shakes free before the hookset. The Egg 34-L19I-I2N6 sinkers answer that with volume: 26 pieces packed into a 0.35 kilogram bag of lead egg weights, all in grey, for $8.99.
The math works out to roughly 35 cents per sinker, which is competitive against the alternatives in this category. The Lindy CNS120 runs $12.99 for 6 pieces (about $2.17 each), and while that's a different no-snagg design meant to slip through cover, it shows how much a bulk lead bag undercuts a name-brand small pack on cost per piece.
The review numbers back up the value case. At 4.5 stars across 83 reviews, this sinker sits at the same rating as the Lindy CNS120, but with far fewer total reviews since it's a newer or lower-volume listing. Still, 600+ bought in the last month is a strong signal for a product this simple, suggesting buyers are treating it as a reliable, low-cost restock item rather than a one-time purchase.
Pros
- 26 pieces per bag works out to about 35 cents per sinker
- 4.5-star rating matches the top-reviewed competitor in this set
- 600+ bought last month, the highest demand figure among the sinkers compared here
- 0.35 kilogram bag gives a decent bulk supply for repeat bottom-rig fishing
- Egg shape is a standard, versatile design for Carolina rigs and slip-sinker setups
- In stock and priced under $9, one of the cheaper entries in this comparison
Cons
- Lead material means it's not legal or ideal for waters with lead-tackle restrictions
- 83 total reviews is a smaller sample than the 1,000-plus review counts on the Lindy and Reaction options
- Assorted 26-piece format doesn't list individual weight sizes, so buyers can't target a specific ounce rating
- Grey color only, no finish options for anglers who prefer camo or natural tones
- Egg sinkers snag more easily in rocky cover than the no-snagg or tungsten designs sold alongside it
Specifications
| Material | Lead |
|---|---|
| Weight | 0.35 Kilograms |
| Size | 26pcs |
| Color | grey |
| Pieces | 26 |
| Feature | egg sinker |
Performance notes
An egg sinker's whole job is to slide freely on the line so a fish feels less resistance when it picks up bait, and at 0.35 kilograms spread across 26 pieces, this bag gives anglers enough weight variety to rig for different current speeds and bottom conditions without buying multiple packages. Lead remains the standard material for this shape because it's dense enough to hold bottom in moving water at a low cost per ounce, which is exactly why the price per piece here undercuts the tungsten options in this comparison. The tradeoff is durability in snag-heavy terrain, since lead deforms and lead egg sinkers are consumable by design rather than saltwater investment pieces. For straightforward catfish, carp, or bottom-rig applications where losing a few sinkers per trip is expected, the low per-unit cost matters more than the material's downsides.
What buyers say
A 4.5-star average across 83 reviews puts this sinker on par with the highest-rated bulk option in this comparison, the Lindy CNS120, even though the Lindy has over a thousand more reviews behind it. What stands out is the 600+ bought last month figure, the strongest recent-demand number among all four sinkers compared here, including products with far larger review histories. That combination, a solid rating on a smaller but growing review base plus the highest current purchase volume, suggests this is a newer listing that's converting well, likely because bottom-rig anglers see the per-piece price and stock up without much hesitation.
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Frequently asked questions
How many sinkers come in the Egg 34-L19I-I2N6 pack?
The bag contains 26 pieces of lead egg sinkers weighing 0.35 kilograms total, which works out to roughly 35 cents per sinker at the $8.99 price point.
Is this sinker made of lead or tungsten?
It's lead, per the listed specs. That keeps the price low compared to the tungsten alternatives in this category, but anglers in lead-restricted waters should look elsewhere.
What sizes are included in the 26-piece bag?
The listing describes the pack as a 26-piece assortment without breaking out individual weight sizes, so buyers who need a specific ounce rating should check the product images before ordering.