Ton ton
Well-known member
Are these claw hammers worth their money?
O.P. said it was a gift for his brother, a part time carpenter.How bad do you want it? That's the pertinent question to ask yourself. It is, after all, your money.
The titanium has 10x less recoil which transfer more energy into the fastener rather than recoil. 45% less weight is suppose to equal less fatigue.As somebody who has never had a Stiletto hammer but grew up in the home building profession since my dad has his own construction company, how much of a difference is there using a 15oz framing hammer vs my go to Estwing, besides the lower weight? I was teased that anything less than 28oz was a "picture framing hammer". How much of a difference is there in driving a pole barn spike or 16d nail. Seems it would require more arm force, or at least more swings since you lose a lot of mass.
You and me bothall i know is i'd be pretty happy if someone got me a martinez hammer. i'd never buy one for myself.
What kind / brand was the "puny little hammer"?I had an uncle that was a carpenter all his life. He used a 16 oz hammer for everything. One day a "new guy" shows up on the job and starts to rib my uncle about his "puny little hammer". He bet my uncle he could drive a 16 penny spike faster than him. Bet was on, New Guy takes a big swing and hits his finger on the first tap. My uncle beat him in a landslide, and wasn's challenge by the newbie again.
I saw my uncle do that as well. I wasn't concerned for him but I was concerned the ladder would fail.My dad witnessed him climbing a two story ladder once with three bundles of shingles on his shoulder. He was no whimp!
I wanted to vote, but I never heard of a Stiletto hammer.Are these claw hammers worth their money?



That's the way I see it. My only consideration is if buying him a pneumatic Hitachi nailer might in fact be cheaper than buying a Martinez or a Stilletto titanium hammer. Why pound nails all day when you can let the compressor do it.Its cheaper than Carpal Tunnel Syndrome from using an Estwing