very nice !! You ****Purchased at a flea market.
very nice !! You ****Purchased at a flea market.
Does anyone know of a company that made a ball peen hammer head larger than 48 oz (3 lbs)?
I picked up a decent vintage Champion DeArment ball peen that weighs in at a whopping 48 ozs. It is marked with a small number "8" on the underside to indicate the weight.
Alloy Artifacts lists the following ball peen hammer sizes produced by Champion DeArment:
Marking / Head weight (oz) / Head measurements (in)
6/0 / 3 / 0.75 x 2.00
5/0 / 4 / 0.75 x 2.50
4/0 / 6 / 0.88 x 2.75
3/0 / 8 / 1.00 x 3.25
2/0 / 12 / 1.13 x 3.63
0 / 16 / 1.25 x 4.00
1 / 20 / 1.38 x 4.25
2 / 24 / 1.44 x 4.75
3 / 28 / 1.50 x 4.75
4 / 32 / 1.63 x 5.00
6 / 40 / 1.75 x 5.38
I think we can now expand this list to include a size 7 (44 oz) and a size 8 (48 oz):
7 / 44 / ?.?? x 5.??
8 / 48 / 2.50 x 5.63
I didn't realize 48oz ball peens were uncommon, I picked up this blue point bp 48b not too long ago.Does anyone know of a company that made a ball peen hammer head larger than 48 oz (3 lbs)?
I picked up a decent vintage Champion DeArment ball peen that weighs in at a whopping 48 ozs. It is marked with a small number "8" on the underside to indicate the weight.
Alloy Artifacts lists the following ball peen hammer sizes produced by Champion DeArment:
Marking / Head weight (oz) / Head measurements (in)
6/0 / 3 / 0.75 x 2.00
5/0 / 4 / 0.75 x 2.50
4/0 / 6 / 0.88 x 2.75
3/0 / 8 / 1.00 x 3.25
2/0 / 12 / 1.13 x 3.63
0 / 16 / 1.25 x 4.00
1 / 20 / 1.38 x 4.25
2 / 24 / 1.44 x 4.75
3 / 28 / 1.50 x 4.75
4 / 32 / 1.63 x 5.00
6 / 40 / 1.75 x 5.38
I think we can now expand this list to include a size 7 (44 oz) and a size 8 (48 oz):
7 / 44 / ?.?? x 5.??
8 / 48 / 2.50 x 5.63


What do you use yours for?
-Nigel
Cut a filler piece for the front gap, add some wood glue and drive it home...



That looks like an older version of the hardwood flooring clete/nailer hammers we have at work. Big rubber end for hitting the nailer and other side (ours are squared) for aligning and tightening the boards.
Thanks to this sight hammers are one of the many things I can't pass up....found this one at ReStore for .50. Never seen one quite like it and I haven't had any luck finding the logo on line...Anybody know anything about this one?
All the info on here is much appreciated.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Bumping this post cause I saw one at the local thrift store. They wanted $5 so I didn't buy it. Can anyone here shed some light on this hammer?
Brian


freudianfloyd said:"...my 9 year old made for me..."
^ go Dad!
nice work all the way across.
SBW may be the maker of the handle?
Have you looked up the Pat No. on the rubber cap for who it was licensed to?
Need some help from the Craftsman gurus on a couple of ball peen hammers. The larger of these (16 oz head) I picked up in Marshalltown, Iowa, a few months ago and the smaller one (4 oz head) was found locally at an estate sale. The larger one had a black rubber end cap on the handle when I found it but it was badly cracked and un-saveable. Underneath the rubber cap were some marking stamped into the end of the handle. The photo that shows the black rubber cap markings is on the smaller hammer.
I looked these up in the old Craftsman catalogs and the late 1940s-early 1950s listings mention the rubber end cap. Does anyone know what company made these hammers for Sears? Is the "SBW" an abbreviated marker's mark? The shape and forming of the head don't look like anything produced by Vaughan. I've seen number-coded markers marks on Craftsman tools but that is about it. They are nicely-made hammers and I would love to know more about them. Looks like they were offered in 4, 8, 12, 16 and 24 oz head sizes.
Also attached below is the PDF of the patent for the rubber grip.