beltdrive
Well-known member
The number 4 is so rare...can't find any closed listings. Only on Worthpoint which I don't have a membership to.
The number 4 is so rare...can't find any closed listings. Only on Worthpoint which I don't have a membership to.
Some refurbished hammers, all were rusty thrift store finds or found from old sheds. I removed the rust, made new handles (all of them) and put some paint on some. The smallest ball peen hammer has a rowan handle and is used mostly for adjusting the blade on my hand planes.
The claw hammers are all manufactured in Finland in the old times. Billnäs or Kellokoski brands. The biggest claw hammer is ridiculously big. I was not sure what kind of handle it should have so I just made one in the same proportions as in the smaller ones.
The masonry hammer is also Billnäs, made in Finland. I put some paint on it as I propably won't have much use for it for a long time.
I propably won't have much use for the most of them but I just can't help myself when i see these lying around, abandoned. I also had lots of wood leftovers suitable for handles from the guitar building days...
Some of these I'll give to my kids when they grow up and leave the nest. I won't let them leave the house without a proper set of tools. This is also a great excuse for hoarding more vintage tools.
Picked this up last week
Wow rrooo! first axes, now hammers! Nice collections!
Jeff, does Klein make their hammers or rebadge. Design looks familiar to me. I like it a lot.
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Not sure.




Apologies if this isn't the right thread for a question on the history of hammer designs. Below is an image of three claw hammers (l to r) a Cheney, a Vaughan, and an unknown.
The Cheney has the common bell-and-neck design seen universally today, while at right are two others with a conical bell design that lacks an obvious neck. From looking at old catalogs, both designs were offered together for decades, but the "no-neck" version appears to be older.
Does anyone know if the latter design has a name it goes by? And can anyone point me to a history of hammer head types?
The wood was much tougher back in the day, just like people.Why is the handle of some older ball peen's considerably thinner than modern ones? Both of these hammers weigh in at 12oz

It’s a solid black handle, posted in the GS thread





Or maybe Keystone Drop Forging made them for Stanley, on machine 34?At first I dismissed “FEC” as a PO’s initials, but closer inspection shows multiple “34”-in-a-keystone stamps.
Hmm. FEC could be a person, but something made me wonder about rail companies, and I found Florida East Coast. Maybe a little out of my locale, but bought at a flea market, not out of the realm of possibility. Tools go where people take them.
The “34” seems like a more important clue, but all I’ve found so far is the usual Masonic red herrings that spring up with any number combined with the word “keystone.”
Anyone know what a “34” in a keystone could be?