johnny
Established Member
I finally broke the shaft of my beloved old claw hammer .It is 53 years old this year, bought for my first job on building work in 1968 and there hasn't been a day in the past 50 years that I haven't used it for something or other. I've already told swmbo that it must be buried with me
At 25oz or 685gms it is a heavy hammer to wield all day long but there is nothing it wasn't capable of including hacking off s&c render with a bolster decades before pneumatic hammer chisels were available to builders.
Anyway enough nostalia ...........could I ask the best way to repair this hammer. The original shaft was 13" however all the replacement shafts I have seen for sale are for a much lighter head ie 13-16oz ..........365-465 gms this means that the shaft head will not have enough thickness to fill the hammer head eye which measures 25 x 15 mm . Would it be better to buy a 400mm (16") shaft and cut it down ??
Which wood would you recommend ? beech or hickory . The Kennedy Hickory shafts are good quality but rather expensive .
The 35oz (1Kg) ball pein I bought off ebay also needs a new 16' handle
At 25oz or 685gms it is a heavy hammer to wield all day long but there is nothing it wasn't capable of including hacking off s&c render with a bolster decades before pneumatic hammer chisels were available to builders.
Anyway enough nostalia ...........could I ask the best way to repair this hammer. The original shaft was 13" however all the replacement shafts I have seen for sale are for a much lighter head ie 13-16oz ..........365-465 gms this means that the shaft head will not have enough thickness to fill the hammer head eye which measures 25 x 15 mm . Would it be better to buy a 400mm (16") shaft and cut it down ??
Which wood would you recommend ? beech or hickory . The Kennedy Hickory shafts are good quality but rather expensive .
The 35oz (1Kg) ball pein I bought off ebay also needs a new 16' handle