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when you hit a board trying to move it, the hammer just bouces off. this hammer can not move a board. if your doing a little bit of everything, my personal favorite is my 20 oz vaughn. i do like this hammer. it pounds nails like a 24 oz, however, for demolition, its horrible. if all your doing is pounding nails, then this is a great hammer.
He loved the hammer and couldn't wait to use it in his building trades class. It was half of any price we could find at our local hardware stores. This hammer was for our son's birthday. The price was great.
Her aged father loves anything that makes her happy.Yeah. They paint the heads pink and work the bejeebers out of any old guy who shows up to laugh. My wild and wonderful daughter does Habitat for Humanity with an informal group of other wild women who call themselves "The Stiletto Group". They like the name because it calls up the immage of stiletto Ladies sexy high heel shoes. My daughter likes the work, and loves the hammer.
and easy to stay accurate all day. The swing speed on this hammer is FAST. Again, pull nails sparingly. I started framing in 1973 starting with a TrueTemper "Rocket". The claws are not designed to really seat a 16D tight deep into the claw near the head where you get maximum leverage for pulling the occasional nail The claws are not really sharp enough to really grab the shank of a 16D whose head has broken off to remove sideways. The magnet will eventually fall out.3.
There is no better way (other than an air nailer) to nail overhead soffits etc than with these lighter hammers. The titanium waffle head is pretty much smooth now but it still has enough friction to hold onto the nail. If your doing demo, get a steel handle hammer, if your pulling nails, have a Estwing steel handle, Rocket or other tank. 1. This hammer excels at one thing ONLY, nailing. I am still using my titanium(s).
If you are framing and need to knock wood around, have a small sledge nearby. Get a spare handle, I really like the curved handle2.
Next time maybe one with a replaceable steel face, for comparison. Not that it'll be useless, just enough that I'll retire it and get another. First, the magnet for the one-hand nail starter slot is really too far back towards the claw, making nail 'flip-out' an annoying something extra to have to watch out for. Fatmax framer since I was 17, and never thought titanium hammers were worth much, considering the cost, until I started working with my current employer, a barn builder, who will use nothing else. One is unique to the tool, the other general to the material used. Don't expect to buy one and use it for the rest of your life.
I'll drive over 500 nails a day for several days a week with mine, and expect to get 2 years out of it, at the outside. After a few days of comments along the lines of, "Your hammer is so slow," and, "Your elbow is going to fry," (we drive all our fasteners by hand, by the way - all the climbing and moving among other things) as well as the numb sensation from my right elbow down, I thought, "what the heck." and bought me one.After a few weeks, I'm spoiled rotten. I highly recommend one to anyone that uses a hammer as a regular part of life; if for no other reason than it's lighter to carry on your belt.There are two cons that I would like to point out. Not a deal-breaker, just mildly annoying.Second, Titanium is harder than steel and this, of course, means it is more brittle. Having a full sized hammer weighing only 14 oz. I have used a 22 oz.
lets me swing a lot faster, with less effort. So, both the face and the claw wear out faster.
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