Cheshirechappie
Established Member
Just a chunk of wood (or something) on a stick, used for whacking things with. Nothing to 'em, really.
In the nature of woodworking, some people will be happy with a bog-standard cheapo 'carpenter's mallet' from the local Big Shed Purveyor of General Grot, some will use any handy brick-end, and some will want a super-duper ultra-balanced, special treated hardwood head with a handle carved to fit their hand (and nobody else's).
I've ended up with four. One off cheapo standard beech carpenter's mallet from Big Shed as mentioned above, which does the whack-whack jobs. I've no idea how heavy it is - about middling as they go - but it seems to work fine. Then I've got a vintage small beech round-headed carver's mallet with a nice comfy handle (slimmish at either end, and with a swell in the middle) that I inherited from my grandad. It's just the thing for tap-tap jobs like small dovetails.
The two that I don't use are both round-heads. One is a lignum vitae head with the most awful handle - fat where it meets the head, then tapering down to the outboard end and finishing with a small knob. For some reason, I just can't grip this handle. It's way too lose at the knob end. Finally, there's the hardwood head with a handle that tapers the other way - thinnish at the head end, fatter at the off end. This is much more comfortable, but since the main two do everything I need, it rarely sees use.
What are your mallet preferences, everybody?
In the nature of woodworking, some people will be happy with a bog-standard cheapo 'carpenter's mallet' from the local Big Shed Purveyor of General Grot, some will use any handy brick-end, and some will want a super-duper ultra-balanced, special treated hardwood head with a handle carved to fit their hand (and nobody else's).
I've ended up with four. One off cheapo standard beech carpenter's mallet from Big Shed as mentioned above, which does the whack-whack jobs. I've no idea how heavy it is - about middling as they go - but it seems to work fine. Then I've got a vintage small beech round-headed carver's mallet with a nice comfy handle (slimmish at either end, and with a swell in the middle) that I inherited from my grandad. It's just the thing for tap-tap jobs like small dovetails.
The two that I don't use are both round-heads. One is a lignum vitae head with the most awful handle - fat where it meets the head, then tapering down to the outboard end and finishing with a small knob. For some reason, I just can't grip this handle. It's way too lose at the knob end. Finally, there's the hardwood head with a handle that tapers the other way - thinnish at the head end, fatter at the off end. This is much more comfortable, but since the main two do everything I need, it rarely sees use.
What are your mallet preferences, everybody?