One would think any hollow hammer made of plastic, with moving metal inside, would have limitations.
Although use is minimal, mine seems to work fine, for what I use it for, but I don't treat like my 5# sledge hammer.
What did you hit with it? just curious.
A stuck brake drum on a T800. I probably could have used a regular hammer but I had it sitting there from getting the Alcoa off and assumed it would be fine. I grew up doing construction and have been told to put my purse down and swing the #@$& hammer enough times that I occasionally over do it so the problem could very well be operator error. These are liquid manure trucks so things tend to seize together a lot.One would think any hollow hammer made of plastic, with moving metal inside, would have limitations.
Although use is minimal, mine seems to work fine, for what I use it for, but I don't treat like my 5# sledge hammer.
What did you hit with it? just curious.
Never considered the cold. I'm sure it factored in. No heat in the shop and it was somewhere around twenty degrees. I have a couple proto ones but they are smaller and are reserved for engine work not chassis work.Stanley ones will do that as well... after about twenty years on a cold day. I got a shiny new one like that from harbor fright once as well. It lasted less than one year, I went back to compocast. I am sure trusty cook makes a very nice one as well. If you actually use tools regularly you will find the cost of quality is quickly negated.
As a guy who has seen one ran over, when it happens the guts get squeezed out. It does kinda look like it though. I guess this brings up a question about proper dead blow usage. My thoughts were that it is a 4lb hammer and so I should swing it like one. Should I be more gentle with dead blows? I saw some ********* five pound dead blows the other day. Can I really lay into those. At what size can I start to get a real swing in?Looks more like it was run over and smashed...from the way it split..and marks on the side...?
As a guy who has seen one ran over, when it happens the guts get squeezed out. It does kinda look like it though. I guess this brings up a question about proper dead blow usage. My thoughts were that it is a 4lb hammer and so I should swing it like one. Should I be more gentle with dead blows? I saw some ********* five pound dead blows the other day. Can I really lay into those. At what size can I start to get a real swing in?
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I consider them consumable because the faces tend to get chewed up, but I've never seen one split like that.
If you use a dead blow with any regularity, youll know the HF ones are ****. They crack, split, and shot tube eventually comes out even if they are used in a climate controlled environment. Ive seen a brand new one do it like OP had. seen them last a couple months too, but that's about it.
Meanwhile, my Nupla dead blow ive had almost 8 years. It has battle scars but still works.
I wouldn't say they are ****. They should last at least a year if not two or three. No, not as long lasting as Nupla or Trusty Cook, but for a lifetime warranty for that price, hard to beat. Every dead blow fails after enough use, and these aren't something I want to spend a lot on to only replace a few years down the road.
Over one hour drive to the nearest HF. Only go once every year or less. I used to go when school got me out of work, but ever since I graduated HS the number of days off I've had is in the negatives. This job I was using the hammer on was started at nine in morning after a two hour company meeting and an hour on another project. I was the only guy on it as the shop mechanic (I'm a field guy) had the day off. They had to have the truck back on a tanker first thing in the morning and I didn't drive it out of the shop and out for a test drive to the nearest truck stop until about one in the morning. So moral of the story is I don't have time to warranty HF stuff. I just want it to work when I do. Getting hosed in the middle of a job in the middle of the night in the middle of winter isn't worth the money. I make minimum wage with no OT so I have to be very selective with my tool purchases. I can't just call up the snappy dealer and open an account. I have a $700 a month tool budget and right now that money is exclusively being used to repurchase the 12k in tools I had stolen Thanksgiving weekend. So yeah next February when I'm caught back up with spending half a years pay on tools I need that I've already bought then maybe we'll have more similar definitions about what's worth the money. Oh boy that was quite the rant. Sorry about that. Really don't mean to come across as antagonistic. I'm not irritated by you, just the cluster#### that is my life right now.Lifetime warranty.. walk in, and they'll say, "OK, no problem - go get another one". Tell me how that's not worth the money.....![]()
I had a Blue Point that did the same thing. Common factor: cold weather. I was working on a snowblower in an unheated garage.
Lifetime warranty.. walk in, and they'll say, "OK, no problem - go get another one". Tell me how that's not worth the money.....![]()
If you're just using it occasionally yes, they should last. If I was a pro, I'd pay for a better name.
My experience is based on working in a machine shop. We used dead blows to ensure parts were sitting flat in vises once clamped. Sometimes there are sharp edges, which doesn't help lifespan, and may occasionally come into contact with the coolant, which probably is not good for the plastic. HF orange hammers just do not hold up to this. I also had an old Mac orange deadblow my dad had given me, that shattered as well. The Nupla ended that problem for me, but it's also a different design, with a fiberglass handle. The trusty cook dead blows do look nice, though.
Never considered the cold. I'm sure it factored in. No heat in the shop and it was somewhere around twenty degrees. I have a couple proto ones but they are smaller and are reserved for engine work not chassis work.
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What's your time worth?
China actually has a pretty advanced plastics industry. A lot of their equipment was purchased from the US. Like anywhere though there will be a disconnect between good quality plastics from China in a GOOD product and the plastics used to make the housing of an $8 hammer sold at HF. And that's $8 end user cost which they make money on after paying materials, manufacturing, shipping....
. the Matco guy traded it didn't want to, Snap On guy traded didn't want to but said he wouldn't trade another busted one and these are guys that come to my truck shop every week.