Ok. These aren't the best photos and you can't see by looking at them how to tie this flure.
It takes a while too. I don't mind making patterns that take a long time to tie at prototype stage. If the fly lure or flure works, then I can start to think about how to make it faster. This one took me about a half an hour. That's not practical. I assume I'd get faster with practice. And perhaps with creative tying too.
It sure does dive and wiggle.
Cut a 60 degree angle V shape from closed cell foam. Rough up a piece of plastic with 220 sandpaper. Use the plastic lid from a Costco tomato container, for instance. Make the plastic diving bill way too big. Glue the foam to the diving bill. Cut the front end off a Twister Tail, at a roughly 60 degree slant. Glue the Twister tail (with super glue) to the back end underside of the foam V. Lash on some adornments. Poke some holes in the back end of the bill and sew in a Kevlar thread hook keeper loop. Tighten the loop around a straw. Make a knot on the top side of the lure. Wet the knot with super glue. Then slide the straw out of the hook keeper loop.
Poke a hole in the diving bill. Trim it to shape with toe nail clippers.
Snell a hook. Push the tippet through a big heavy bead, and then up and out through a hole in the bill. Attach a barrel swivel. Thread the hook into the Kevlar hook keeper loop. You're ready to fish.
On big river trout water you can fish this across and down. Straight down. They'll wiggle all the way down to the bottom, darting back and forth below you, stirring up gravel. Brown trout can't resist. They try to refuse. But they just can't do it.