The rate at which the degradation occurs depends on a bunch of factors. Environmental ones are big, but there are also manufacturing defects that can leave unreacted chemicals in the end product. Improving that has been one of the big improvements in durabality of these things.i just got off the phone with customer service and they asked for a couple of pictures and my address. She said it should be covered. i'll update when i hear something.
it's odd it was just this one, i have a couple others that are fine.
The current Estwings are not the same. They are now imported and a different design.i just got off the phone with customer service and they asked for a couple of pictures and my address. She said it should be covered. i'll update when i hear something.
it's odd it was just this one, i have a couple others that are fine.
Actually they were made under the Compocast Brand which at that time was part of SBD. They all eventually died from the white death. If something lasts 20 years, which is typical for these, I just scrap them out and move on with life. I have a lot of recently bought Trusty Cook which I expect to last 20 years which is much longer than I expect to last myself.The current Estwings are not the same. They are now imported and a different design.
The one you have was made by Trusty Cook in the USA. I would reach out to them and see if they would be willing to help.
Huh? Not sure what you are referring to. The OP’s hammer was made by TC.Actually they were made under the Compocast Brand which at that time was part of SBD. They all eventually died from the white death. If something lasts 20 years, which is typical for these, I just scrap them out and move on with life. I have a lot of recently bought Trusty Cook which I expect to last 20 years which is much longer than I expect to last myself.
Trusty Cook bought, or was given, or whatever arrangement was made for them to take over Compocast from Stanley Black and Decker. I believe they are made in the same factory using the same chemistry. In any respect Compocast and TC's hammers both, at least in that time frame, died in the same manner. The new TC might have changed the urethane chemistry and last longer before the white death strikes but as long as my new ones last as long as I do I don't care.Huh? Not sure what you are referring to. The OP’s hammer was made by TC.
I hope the blue ones don’t have that problem. I have that one and the smaller one.
Had the exact same experience. I bought a set of three sometime in the late 90’s. At most I used one of them once. A few years ago I attempted to use one and it disintegrated. Pulled out the other two and they both fell apart. They exchanged them no hassle. I have some Craftsman Professional dead blows that did the same. Need to find a place to swap them. FWIW, the Snap Ons were orange plastic. The replacements they gave are red and seem to be a different material.I also had 3 Snap On's that had sat in storage for close to 20 years after I had quit turning wrenches professionally and when I got them back out after all that time, the polyurethane broke into pieces first time I used them. Snap On dealer replaced them all no questions asked.
Funny, mine were orange as well and purchased in the late 90's. They were replaced with one orange, one red and one black. It was what he had on the truck at the time and I didn't care what the color was as long as they got replaced!Had the exact same experience. I bought a set of three sometime in the late 90’s. At most I used one of them once. A few years ago I attempted to use one and it disintegrated. Pulled out the other two and they both fell apart. They exchanged them no hassle. I have some Craftsman Professional dead blows that did the same. Need to find a place to swap them. FWIW, the Snap Ons were orange plastic. The replacements they gave are red and seem to be a different material.
I wish Lixie offered metal replacement faces. Brass, bronze, aluminum, steel... something besides urethane.This is also why I'm a pretty big proponent of the metal-bodied Lixie (or Lixie-style) deadblows with replaceable faces. I've seen so many deadblows from different brands just disintegrate.
Of course my favorite are lead deadblows, but they tend to have relatively short service lives and need to be recast often if you use them hard.
You know, I could have sworn they or someone did, but in all my searching I can't find any. Seems like such an obvious thing to offer.I wish Lixie offered metal replacement faces. Brass, bronze, aluminum, steel... something besides urethane.