I've got a stable of hammers... almost always gravitate to my wood handled ones without thinking.If you want a 12 oz hammer buy a steel one. The stick the hammer is attached to will determine vibration transfer and not the head. Some are going back to wood.
Since hammers were introduced---
Have U noticed the race for the most $$$ hammers?
LOL, 20 oz titanium hammer? @ $150' ???
I always thought 20 oz was 20 no matter what it was made from.
Heck does the nail know the difference as to what hit it?
AND hanging from your tool belt is the 20 oz titanium feel lighter?
No, different hammers have a different feel for sure. Its not about the weight, its about the feel in your hand, the control and even the sound...
I frame with a steel 28oz mill faced Estwing. I like the feel of the tink-tink-tink it makes while driving nails. If it had a wood handle, it would feel different....more of a “ whack-whack-whack “ sound and a more soft feel.
Does that make sense? :laughing:
And on some rare occasions, a primordial scream!The sound some hammers make is more of an "ow, ow, ow! **%#$%$##!*) if the user isn't comfortable with it.
Sorry , I must have been thinking about my HF Titanium welder. Getting old is a *****, things get a bit twisted in the mind sometimes.Um... Titanium is considerably heavier than Aluminum.
Aluminum 168.48 lbs per cubic foot
Titanium 283.39 lbs per cubic foot
Steel rolled 490.0 lbs per cubic foot.
While I think using titanium for hammers is pretty ridiculous, There must be some reason it is being done.
Thinking about this, maybe you meant to say "since titanium is lighter than steel" Of course hammers (at least the faces) are made out of steel not Aluminum. some might have an aluminum handle, or fiberglass etc. But I don't know of any framing hammers with aluminum faces. I have seen plenty of brass and plastic and some aluminum faced hammers for precise light work like gun smithing, but not nail driving.
back in the old days blacksmiths could weld with a hot fire and a heavy hammer. wonder what they could have done with an old tombstone welder and their know how?
Same here, I liked my Lincoln Tombstone welder, but now that I have a inverter (Power Arc 200STi), the two Stone went to my brother's house a couple weeks back as I haven't turned it on since the inverter showed up.I'm one of those too. I had one for years, grew up on one was hesitant to replace it with a DC inverter machine, I mean my old Lincoln AC225 was a good welder...... about the 4th rod burned through my Powerarc 200 I had decided the Lincoln wasn't really needed anymore and found someone really happy to have a good welder at a very good price. A few years later I don't miss the Lincoln.