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Hammer time!

GX460DIYguy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 26, 2023
Messages
430
Location
Texas
Found this head in the bottom of a bucket in grandpas shed. It was covered pretty bad with rust and the only thing I’ve been able to make out so far is the 16 on the top and bottom of the head. There was a safety goggle warning on the side but it’s been pretty much worn off. Any ideas on the maker?
IMG_9954.jpeg

Also found this curved claw. The handle and the rectangle opening at the top filled with red epoxy leads me to say it’s a plumb, but not sure if others copied that style. Found out that when the ranch was enduring lean years my great grandfather worked as at a lumber yard in town and did carpentry jobs to pay the bills. He also built the house they lived in for over 50 years.
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GX460DIYguy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 26, 2023
Messages
430
Location
Texas
Found this head in the bottom of a bucket in grandpas shed. It was covered pretty bad with rust and the only thing I’ve been able to make out so far is the 16 on the top and bottom of the head. There was a safety goggle warning on the side but it’s been pretty much worn off. Any ideas on the maker?
IMG_9954.jpeg

Also found this curved claw. The handle and the rectangle opening at the top filled with red epoxy leads me to say it’s a plumb, but not sure if others copied that style. Found out that when the ranch was enduring lean years my great grandfather worked as at a lumber yard in town and did carpentry jobs to pay the bills. He also built the house they lived in for over 50 years.
IMG_9895.jpeg
IMG_9897.jpeg
So as far as the ball peen head, the only old ones I can find that had the weight behind the face like this one is Mac tools. The sides are pretty worn and only very faint markings that can’t be made out are visible along with some gouges. Seeing that I’ve found a few Mac items mixed in with everything else, I’m gonna say I’m 75% sure it’s a very old Mac head. I’m gonna just clean it up as best as I can and throw another handle on it. I need to find a better way to clean stuff up than brass brushes and scouring pads. Might be time to invest in some evaporust and a bench grinder with wire wheels.
 

GX460DIYguy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 26, 2023
Messages
430
Location
Texas
One pic at that angle doesn't help with ID - just sayin'...
Like I said, there’s really nothing to see on the sides. I’ve looked through a lot of pics from different brands and Mac was the only one that had the weight behind the face of it and the design is pretty similar. I can’t say for certain that it definitely is, but it’s pretty similar.
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Here’s a Mac that’s on eBay
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fishwatcher

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Joined
Jan 26, 2023
Messages
750
I just got this little Plomb(?) bell-faced(?) claw hammer. The head cleaned up well with a wire wheel and abrasive radial brush. The head is a little loose. I will try to tighten it up with a little upside down pounding on the bottom of the handle tomorrow or maybe a soak in antifreeze. IMG_3047.jpeg
 

AntiqueBen

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Joined
Aug 4, 2021
Messages
1,438
I pulled this hammer out of a toolbox I haven't been through in a while. It weighs exactly 31 oz? Pretty hefty hammer. I need to find the right handle for it though. It looks to be older & is somewhat crude with all the exposed forge marks & octagon shaft. Personally, I like seeing the forge marks. Basically left over evidence of when USA forging was the best. Unfortunately I can't find any manufacturer marks, or any marks or stampings at all. Any ideas?
 

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AreBeeBee

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Joined
Sep 17, 2020
Messages
414
Location
Wisconsin
I had one like it (ReStore item for a few bucks) which had a hatchet handle on it, certainly not the original. I don't do framing, and after de-rusting the head and cleaning up the handle, I redonated it to RS on the catch-and-release principle.
 

AntiqueBen

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Joined
Aug 4, 2021
Messages
1,438
I like my short handled hammers. I use my shorties more than any of the others. I decided to put a short handle on this hammer & it turned out nice. It'll be a nice beater around the shop.
 

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Zippercat

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Joined
Jul 13, 2013
Messages
828
Location
TN
I like my short handled hammers. I use my shorties more than any of the others. I decided to put a short handle on this hammer & it turned out nice. It'll be a nice beater around the shop.

I’ve never beaten a nice before! Any tips?
 
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Patrickm82

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Joined
Feb 27, 2021
Messages
789
Location
Massachusetts
Grabbed these two hammers at estate sales recently. A lixie C in pretty good shape and a shop made machinist hammer with a cool handle. It is all 1/4”, plastic of some sort, disc’s stacked and the bottom unthreads. Someone painted the insides of alternating discs for the colored look

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Beerhippie

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Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,616
Location
Far NE Oregon
Grabbed these two hammers at estate sales recently. A lixie C in pretty good shape and a shop made machinist hammer with a cool handle. It is all 1/4”, plastic of some sort, disc’s stacked and the bottom unthreads. Someone painted the insides of alternating discs for the colored look

IMG_6109.jpeg
A DIY hammer grip of stacked acrylic... that just about screams seventies!
 

Beerhippie

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Oct 13, 2023
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Location
Far NE Oregon

Tchicken

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Jul 16, 2024
Messages
291
Location
THE Motor City
Folks - is there a general source for old hammer restoration and/or identification somewhere out there? (aside from the many posts here)?

I've a couple old beaters that came from me gramps, he'd a been 118 last month, so they have no markings I can find. We grew up in northern Ohio, lots of manufacturing back when, but I haven't found a place to guide id or fixing them back up. Thanks, sorry for the intrusion
 

Beerhippie

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Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,616
Location
Far NE Oregon
Folks - is there a general source for old hammer restoration and/or identification somewhere out there? (aside from the many posts here)?

I've a couple old beaters that came from me gramps, he'd a been 118 last month, so they have no markings I can find. We grew up in northern Ohio, lots of manufacturing back when, but I haven't found a place to guide id or fixing them back up. Thanks, sorry for the intrusion
First thing to do is to clean the sides of the head with some fine steel wool--4-0 is my go-to. This will often reveal markings obscured by many years of dirt and rust. Hammer stampings, as you can see in the many photos above, are often shallow to begin with.
 

Tchicken

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Joined
Jul 16, 2024
Messages
291
Location
THE Motor City
That's the one I own. A workhorse.

First thing to do is to clean the sides of the head with some fine steel wool--4-0 is my go-to. This will often reveal markings obscured by many years of dirt and rust. Hammer stampings, as you can see in the many photos above, are often shallow to begin with.
I tried that (000) then some Rem Oil with a patch - all I can make out is what seems an inverted V shape on the show side of the heavy ball peen. Gramps probably bought Cleveland made hammers when he lived in Alliance. Thanks will see if something is exposed in the am
 
OP
O

Outlawmws

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Aug 9, 2011
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39,085
Location
The Badlands
Nice clear pics of what you have may help, but many hammers are unidentifiable today as there were hundreds if not thousands of sources.
 

Tchicken

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Jul 16, 2024
Messages
291
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THE Motor City
Thanks - problem is they don't show anything that would appear in a picture .. I was looking for maybe a way to get down to the stampings .. in the old days parking downwind under the foundry stack the remedy was oxalic acid .. like that.
 

Beerhippie

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Oct 13, 2023
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Far NE Oregon
Thanks - problem is they don't show anything that would appear in a picture .. I was looking for maybe a way to get down to the stampings .. in the old days parking downwind under the foundry stack the remedy was oxalic acid .. like that.
Nitric acid would be the go-to for revealing worn stampings. It's pretty nasty stuff, but can be dealt with. Look up etching pattern-weld steel.

Many hammers--see my Calumet above--have been pretty severely abused. Mine was obviously used to drive fasteners with the side of the head--a trick for nailing in restricted spaces--which did a good job of nearly obliterating the the stampings. Just the mass of a hammer rattling around in a portable tool box does a lot of damage.

Of all the mechanic's hammers I have in my shop, I think maybe four still have anything resembling legible stampings--many probably never did have anything.
 
OP
O

Outlawmws

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Location
The Badlands
Thanks - problem is they don't show anything that would appear in a picture .. I was looking for maybe a way to get down to the stampings .. in the old days parking downwind under the foundry stack the remedy was oxalic acid .. like that.

Occasionally the head shape and design can be ID's back to the Mfg. not always, but this is why you start with good pics from all sides.
 

GaryM909

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Joined
Apr 11, 2016
Messages
1,515
Location
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
I got this Cheney Hammer about 25 years ago from my uncle when he moved into an old folks home.
It's in pretty good shape including the handle. I never had to clean it up at all.
I leave it in the basement to hammer on paint lids
 

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Beerhippie

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Far NE Oregon
I got this Cheney Hammer about 25 years ago from my uncle when he moved into an old folks home.
It's in pretty good shape including the handle. I never had to clean it up at all.
I leave it in the basement to hammer on paint lids
Oh, gawd, no... just no....

That's what rubber soft-blow hammers are for. I can't count how many ruined near-full gallons of paint I've seen from having the rim dented....
 

kinglukas38

Active member
Joined
Mar 21, 2025
Messages
29
Location
NWO, Canada
Small project on the week off, new handles. Had these heads for a little bit now with the larger of the two seeing actual shop use until the handle gave out when it was dropped. Wanted to add the smaller to the shop rotation for less aggressive hammering tasks, so it was a good chance to get both to functional order.
The smaller head is around 150g and the handle is made from the core of a balsam log. Slight concerns about longevity as its soft wood but I really shouldn't be swinging this one too hard.
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Large head here comes in around 480g, handle from a hardwood dowel. Some added flair with my stamp burned into the handle butts, unlikely that they walk away in the shop but can't be too careful.

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kinglukas38

Active member
Joined
Mar 21, 2025
Messages
29
Location
NWO, Canada
Cool hammers, and interesting curves to the handles.

What work do you do with them that the curves help with?
these will be mostly driving punches and pry tools, the curve is just for ergo. Doubles that I don't have to think if I'm using the flat face or rounded face. The first handle I made for the larger head was straight so I figured some curve couldn't hurt this time around.
 

Eric Brown

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 14, 2024
Messages
670
Andrew Hexdall sheet metal hammer. When I bought it, it came with a hand-written note. I typed it out for easier reading.
Patent # 2606468 (Aug 12, 1952). Not on Datamp.org.
 

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