I managed to even bore myself over on the Record vice thread, so here is one about hammers to liven things up!
I have been using a Plumb hammer on my new workbench and it is the bees knees. It is even better than my erstwhile favourite hammer ( reserved for household DIY and made by another US manufacturer, Estwing). Why? Well I could wax lyrical about balance and heft and such like, but the real reason is the inclusion of a 'take-up' wedge.
Patented in 1922 by Fayette R Plumb and co, the ingenious wedge allows loose handles to be resecured by the turn of a screw.
https://www.google.com/patents/US1426316
.. and it actually works - my handle arrived very loose so I removed the screw, blew out debris from the bottom of the hole, put it back with an additional half a turn and bingo the head is rock solid again.
I wish similar had been used on my two ball pein hammers, both of which will have to be fixed by replacing the handles.
My example seems to have stood the test of the time - I am not sure when it was made but it has two previous owners stamps, and apparently Plumb stop using the wedges in the 50s when they came up with a new fangled resin based wedge, so possibly 1930s or 40s
Do you know of any better hammers? Perhaps you have your own hammer related stories to share!
* edit - sorry I included the wrong link (https://www.google.com/patents/US2850331 is for the 'permabond' fixing - correct link now above)
Popular science ad, 1925
https://books.google.com/books?id=TikDA ... e&q&f=true
I have been using a Plumb hammer on my new workbench and it is the bees knees. It is even better than my erstwhile favourite hammer ( reserved for household DIY and made by another US manufacturer, Estwing). Why? Well I could wax lyrical about balance and heft and such like, but the real reason is the inclusion of a 'take-up' wedge.
Patented in 1922 by Fayette R Plumb and co, the ingenious wedge allows loose handles to be resecured by the turn of a screw.
https://www.google.com/patents/US1426316
.. and it actually works - my handle arrived very loose so I removed the screw, blew out debris from the bottom of the hole, put it back with an additional half a turn and bingo the head is rock solid again.
I wish similar had been used on my two ball pein hammers, both of which will have to be fixed by replacing the handles.
My example seems to have stood the test of the time - I am not sure when it was made but it has two previous owners stamps, and apparently Plumb stop using the wedges in the 50s when they came up with a new fangled resin based wedge, so possibly 1930s or 40s
Do you know of any better hammers? Perhaps you have your own hammer related stories to share!
* edit - sorry I included the wrong link (https://www.google.com/patents/US2850331 is for the 'permabond' fixing - correct link now above)
Popular science ad, 1925
https://books.google.com/books?id=TikDA ... e&q&f=true