bargainhuntingking
Well-known member
...also called a top maul.
So I found this at my local ReStore for $2 and posted it with some other booty on the Garage sale page.
It was giant hammer about 9” long with a pointed end. RTM educated me that it was called a ship/top maul.
I dropped it into some vinegar overnight and scrubbed it with a wire brush. I was pleased to see the partial outline of a Woodings Verona symbol, and a “5”, which corresponds to the Woodings Verona catalog as a 8 3/4” 5lb ship maul.
A couple of years ago a I bought a box of 1 foot lag screws at an estate sale (for what who knows, but they seemed cool). In the box were also 5 giant foot long nails that I cleaned up and primered and currently use for car camping tent stakes in rocky terrain as they can pounded into anything without bending. I think they are actually ship nails that the ship maul is design to pound, and the pointy end is designed to sink the nail flush with the ship plank (countersunk) surface.
Any experts want to chime in?
Can’t wait to rehaft it on a burly hickory 32-36” handle and pound some stuff with it!
http://www.blackburntools.com/artic...rchives/pdfs/woodings-verona-catalogue-16.pdf
So I found this at my local ReStore for $2 and posted it with some other booty on the Garage sale page.
It was giant hammer about 9” long with a pointed end. RTM educated me that it was called a ship/top maul.
I dropped it into some vinegar overnight and scrubbed it with a wire brush. I was pleased to see the partial outline of a Woodings Verona symbol, and a “5”, which corresponds to the Woodings Verona catalog as a 8 3/4” 5lb ship maul.
A couple of years ago a I bought a box of 1 foot lag screws at an estate sale (for what who knows, but they seemed cool). In the box were also 5 giant foot long nails that I cleaned up and primered and currently use for car camping tent stakes in rocky terrain as they can pounded into anything without bending. I think they are actually ship nails that the ship maul is design to pound, and the pointy end is designed to sink the nail flush with the ship plank (countersunk) surface.
Any experts want to chime in?
Can’t wait to rehaft it on a burly hickory 32-36” handle and pound some stuff with it!
http://www.blackburntools.com/artic...rchives/pdfs/woodings-verona-catalogue-16.pdf
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