54FordPanel
Well-known member
I'm 51 years old, and I've never had a ball peen hammer in my tool chest. Just curious, what specifically do you use them for?
I use them for striking punches mainly.
I'd like to get a new engineers hammer for myself. Someone else here uses a Eastwing engineers' hammer that I really like for hit number punches on vanadium steel and it works well.
Of course!Thanks for the info, folks.
You know what this means, don't you? I just discovered I was unaware of a tool that I obviously desperately need.
Hope your boss bashing is only done with a 4oz.foreheads of people who get on my nerves!! bosses and drivers!!!
Beating the sh*t out of stuff.And because I'm a mechanic and mechanics don't use claw hammers.We have no use for a claw,very few nails on a car.
Whacking the end of a wrench trying to get the oil drain bolt off.
Ditto on the softer face of ball pein hammers vs claw hammers. You always want a hammer face to be softer than whatever you're hitting. Little dents in the hammer are better than shrapnel. Claw hammers generally are the hardest, ball pein, cross pein, engineers, and drilling hammers are all softer.
The ball end is usefull in places the other end won't fit because it is slightly smaller.

Claw hammer: nails and relocating wood.
mallet: wood chisels
Mason hammer: bricks / rocks
Roofing hammer: shingles/sometimes bricks.
Ball peen: Hitting any metal other than nails.
sledge: hitting stuff other than nails that requires a bigger hammer.
Baby sledge, stone chisels / cold chisels
Various forging hammers: hitting hot steel/iron
The kinds of hammers go on like the kinds of wrenches.
Anyway, hitting regular steel with a claw hammer is a bad idea. Nails are soft and will not cause the hardened face of a claw hammer to crack, but if you are pounding on regular steel, the face of the hammer could shatter. (I have seen this happen when student was cold forging some mild steel.) The face of a claw hammer is like a strong crystal.
trythis said:Ball peen: Hitting any metal other than nails.