To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

What are soft hammers used for?

compyello

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2011
Messages
117
Location
Sioux City, Iowa
I am wondering if someone can tell me more about bronze, brass, and copper hammers? I need to rebuild a manual trans so I am kind of looking at brass punches/drifts and thought maybe a brass hammer would be a good idea as well. I also saw if you are going to hit another hammer someone recommended a copper hammer. I am not opposed to more than one but is one more multi purpose? I don't know about weight right now but I would know it if I held one, maybe 1-2 lbs.? The other thing is that it is made in the US.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Conductor562

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2012
Messages
2,312
Location
West "By God" Virginia
We use brass hammers and punches in flammable areas for their spark resistance. Brass is much softer than steel and therefor not as durable.

Proto offers a good variety of hammers. Zorotools.com carries about all of them.
 

Jack Burton

Well-known member
Joined
May 22, 2009
Messages
105
Soft hammers are used for the same purpose brass drifts are used, so the part doesn't get marred up.

Machinists use dead-blow or lead mallets everyday to set their material on their parallels.

I imagine somewhere non-ferrous hammers are used for their non-sparking characteristics, but the above reasons are the main ones.
 

MattPersman

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 1, 2009
Messages
1,656
Location
Indiana
Most manual trans you need a bearing splitter, a press and different arm length pullers, sometimes special tools. Not much hammer work
 

djkeev

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 8, 2012
Messages
1,223
Location
North Western New Jersey
There are so many soft hammers! I've got a small wall covered with them. Lead hammers, brass hammers, bronze hammers, rubber hammers (black and white, I'm racially neutral :) ), plastic hammers of various densities, leather hammers, wooden hammers, plastic lead shot filled (dead blow) hammers........... They are nice to have for various tasks where steel is too violent and unforgiving to use. Honestly non tool people look at my hammer collection and deem me crazy! "What the F do you need so many hammers for?!?"

Now lets get into the other small wall covered with steel hammers.......framing, ball peen, auto body, hatchets, masonry, geologist, drill.............. :)

About the only hammer material I don't have is titanium, just never could justify the cash outlay $$$ for a high tech item I don't really need!......well, I guess I don't really NEED most of my hammers...........but I really really really want one!

Dave
 

woody 73

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 14, 2009
Messages
11,545
Location
The Great State Up North
djkeev wow sorry to hear that you missed my one post about the titanium (american Made) hammer that went on sale for half price;it must have been before you became a member.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
C

compyello

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2011
Messages
117
Location
Sioux City, Iowa
Ok with out going into detail on projects or we can call it a generral purpose hammer which would every one recomend brass,copper,bronze?
 
OP
C

compyello

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2011
Messages
117
Location
Sioux City, Iowa
peice of cake. Willys transmissions weren't they? I don't recall needing any hammer for too much on that. when I did mine i used this site to help me through it just in case...

http://www.willystech.com/wt/T90RebuildGuide/T90rebuild.htm

I did my dana 18 at the same time... It doesn't get much easier then those.

I'd probably reccomend rubber mallets and a good brass hammer.

Information I saw they talked about brass punches/drifts so that is what got me thinking maybe a brass hammer would be nice to have around
 
OP
C

compyello

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2011
Messages
117
Location
Sioux City, Iowa
Just picked up a craftsman rubber/hard plastic with wood handle because I have wanted one for awhile but did not find a soft metal hammer. I did not like the craftsman changeable head hammer. No luck finding a brass,bronze,or copper hammer today. One place to try maybe next saturday but still open to thoughts on which one to use for what or which one to get.Thank you
 

rmsg0040

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 15, 2012
Messages
2,635
Location
Toronto
Just picked up a craftsman rubber/hard plastic with wood handle because I have wanted one for awhile but did not find a soft metal hammer. I did not like the craftsman changeable head hammer. No luck finding a brass,bronze,or copper hammer today. One place to try maybe next saturday but still open to thoughts on which one to use for what or which one to get.Thank you

Lots of brass hammers:

http://www.tooltopia.com/search.aspx?find=brass+hammer

OTC got some too
 
OP
C

compyello

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 1, 2011
Messages
117
Location
Sioux City, Iowa
I guess I like the idea of just a solid hammer with no moving parts if that makes any sense. But I have never held one or seen one in person then maybe I would change my mind
 

djkeev

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 8, 2012
Messages
1,223
Location
North Western New Jersey
?.......... but still open to thoughts on which one to use for what or which one to get.Thank you

Really, it depends on what you are hitting.
Hub caps /wheel covers - rubber
Pavers - hard rubber / dead blow
Aluminum housings - dead blow, hard plastic
Gears / shafts - brass, plastic ......but be careful of chips and slivers of the striking head that may be dislodged from contact with sharp machined edges, these can get into bearings etc. causing problems.
Bronze - striking steel where sparks are a concern
Lead - wheel spinners, similar hard blow but minimal to no damage

It's best to file and shape soft hammer heads as they deform from use.

That's a starter list for me. I'm sure that Others will vary from, add to or criticize my choices.

Dave
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom