I keep reading that ball peen hammers are good for punches and chisels.
Are you supposed to hit the punch with the round face of the hammer?

I keep reading that ball peen hammers are good for punches and chisels.
Are you supposed to hit the punch with the round face of the hammer?

The round end is kind of pointless considering not many people peen rivets anymore
I was told you can use the round part for making gaskets
I keep reading that ball peen hammers are good for punches and chisels.
Are you supposed to hit the punch with the round face of the hammer?

i was told that you can use the round part for making gaskets.

5,000 post counts and you ask how to use a hammer?![]()
You don't seem to realize that just because someone is a long-time member does not imply that they are a machinist or mechanic by trade. The OP might be a carpenter and never have even handled a ball peen hammer. Or he might be a computer programmer (or whatever) and handled very few tools period, but is interested in the history of tools, etc.
In any case, your reply was harsh & unnecessary.![]()
No it's not. The round end makes the other end heavier so you know which end to hit things with.... The round end is kind of pointless ...

Who makes a good ball peen hammer these days? I assume, that like anything else, cheap manufacturing has found a way to turn out bad ones.

You guys are brutal!
Obviously you wouldn't want to use the rounded end to hit a chisel. But, I've always been told that claw hammers always have a slight crown to the face, which aids in driving nails (their intended purpose). Where as the flat face on a ball peen hammer is truly flat.
I've also heard that they heat treat the heads differently between ball peen and claw hammers. Ball peen hammers tend to be a little softer and less brittle. This makes them more suited for shaping metals, which is their intended purpose. Does anybody know for sure?
I do. OK the last time was about 3 months ago but they are cool fasteners in the right situation. Also, anyone who works on old stuff must need to use snap rivets now and then.
I have seen that done also but it is a bit too brutal on the part you are making the gasket for for my liking.
I've also heard that they heat treat the heads differently between ball peen and claw hammers. Ball peen hammers tend to be a little softer and less brittle. This makes them more suited for shaping metals, which is their intended purpose. Does anybody know for sure?
I think you are correct on both counts. The ball peen's flat face is most likely to be used to hit a punch, chisel, or other piece of hard steel. It would chip, causing dangerous flying chips, if it were as hard as the chisel or punch, so being a little softer is probably a good thing. A claw hammer is designed to hit nails, which are relatively soft steel, and thus, the harder face, and slightly rounded to allow for striking when not perfectly square, is ideal for this purpose. Never use a claw hammer to strike a steel punch or chisel, that is dangerous, as something will probably chip.
Charles
This is what I was wondering about, the make up of the steel.
Cheap stores sell both claw and ball hammers, and I would be surprised if they use a different kind of steel.
So how do you tell the difference.
I think you are correct on both counts. The ball peen's flat face is most likely to be used to hit a punch, chisel, or other piece of hard steel. It would chip, causing dangerous flying chips, if it were as hard as the chisel or punch, so being a little softer is probably a good thing. A claw hammer is designed to hit nails, which are relatively soft steel, and thus, the harder face, and slightly rounded to allow for striking when not perfectly square, is ideal for this purpose. Never use a claw hammer to strike a steel punch or chisel, that is dangerous, as something will probably chip.
Charles
I think you are correct on both counts. The ball peen's flat face is most likely to be used to hit a punch, chisel, or other piece of hard steel. It would chip, causing dangerous flying chips, if it were as hard as the chisel or punch, so being a little softer is probably a good thing. A claw hammer is designed to hit nails, which are relatively soft steel, and thus, the harder face, and slightly rounded to allow for striking when not perfectly square, is ideal for this purpose. Never use a claw hammer to strike a steel punch or chisel, that is dangerous, as something will probably chip.
Charles

I think you are correct on both counts. The ball peen's flat face is most likely to be used to hit a punch, chisel, or other piece of hard steel. It would chip, causing dangerous flying chips, if it were as hard as the chisel or punch, so being a little softer is probably a good thing. A claw hammer is designed to hit nails, which are relatively soft steel, and thus, the harder face, and slightly rounded to allow for striking when not perfectly square, is ideal for this purpose. Never use a claw hammer to strike a steel punch or chisel, that is dangerous, as something will probably chip.
Charles

This is what I was wondering about, the make up of the steel.
Cheap stores sell both claw and ball hammers, and I would be surprised if they use a different kind of steel.
So how do you tell the difference.
Can I trust the $15 harbor freight set to be a softer metal?
I'm not sure I've ever seen a ball peen advertised as "softer metal" suitable for shaping harder steel.
The ball end works better than the average hammer head for breaking apart chunks of ice cubes that are frozen together, so you can get them distributed in the cooler, or that's just me.
If the threads were meant to die, they'd have an expiration date. Simple as that. Might have been anyway... ball peen hammers are so controversial.You dredged up a 7 year old thread for this?
How can talking about hammers sound like trolling? Is there a keebler elf in your brain narrating what I wrote... oh well, I'm not checking the date ever (unless it's a box of crackers).
Just throwing the troll comment in there for no good reason sounds more like trolling, literally (shouldn't that be outdated by now). Anything can be entertaining though, knock yourselves out (as if hammers weren't exciting enough).

don't feed the troll![]()
