Blacksmithing Hammers

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  • Опубліковано 9 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 91

  • @garstang097
    @garstang097 2 роки тому +55

    as a smith myself i reckon this man might be the best blacksmiths blacksmith youtuber, him and Rowan Taylor. no slow-motion power hammer shots with unlicensed generic rock over it. just a man who knows his stuff and is happy to share.

    • @BlackBearForge
      @BlackBearForge  2 роки тому +24

      I must confess, I do like a good slow motion power hammer shot.

    • @garstang097
      @garstang097 2 роки тому +8

      @@BlackBearForge they are the icing. the cake is what matters. you make good cake.

    • @beans1557
      @beans1557 2 роки тому

      @@garstang097
      Damn, well said. I agree in totality.

    • @mathiasschumacher7321
      @mathiasschumacher7321 2 роки тому +1

      Have to figure out Rowan Taylor, but let us not forget Mark Aspery, his tutorials are also splendid.

  • @ChristCenteredIronworks
    @ChristCenteredIronworks 2 роки тому +18

    Great showing of hammers John 👍👍 always love the advice you give!

  • @AtholIronworks
    @AtholIronworks 2 роки тому +4

    I ordered a Bailey doming hammer a month ago can't wait for it to get here.

  • @Swaffles870
    @Swaffles870 2 роки тому +6

    I'll never grow tired of this. You sir, are awesome

  • @chrispolley9487
    @chrispolley9487 2 роки тому +2

    I found an old beat up cross pein this past summer at a yard sale. Rusted, the face mushroomed and dented and it had a piece of broom stick for a handle. Refaced it, new custom handle and cleaned just the righ amout of rust off it, now is my go-to favorite hammer.

  • @johnearhart8811
    @johnearhart8811 2 роки тому +5

    Absolutely love all my Brent Bailey hammers. Awesome feel and balance.

  • @ArmySoldier1972
    @ArmySoldier1972 2 роки тому +1

    John,
    Thanks for the hammer run down.
    Good informwtion.
    Army
    SE Oregon

  • @vedamaritabullockashley2770
    @vedamaritabullockashley2770 2 роки тому +1

    Yep, right with you on the "weakness". Caved in at the NWBA Swaptoberfest and picked up a wonderful diagonal peen from Portland. Iron Works. Didn't need it, just love it!

  • @liam_culb
    @liam_culb 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks for the rundown John, always good to get your perspective

  • @BevinEG
    @BevinEG 2 роки тому +1

    Ooooh now I got to know what's in the box!

  • @SchysCraftCo.
    @SchysCraftCo. 2 роки тому +2

    I have a fat boy forge hammer for my daily driver. It’s a 2.5 pound rounder and flat. Absolutely love it. John love your videos. Can’t wait to see more videos soon. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work John. Forge On. Fab On. Weld On. Keep Making. God bless.

  • @HisWayHomestead
    @HisWayHomestead 2 роки тому +1

    Nice cliff hanger John... I'll be waiting to see what is in the box!!!

  • @TalRohan
    @TalRohan 2 роки тому +4

    I also have a thing about sharp pointy objects ....axes billhooks etc for working with and love being able to make my own custom patterns ...great to hear about your favourite hammers..at present I use I think 3 for forging ...all different weights and patterns.

  • @shortfuse43
    @shortfuse43 2 роки тому +2

    John, among my most used hammers is an old Craftsman cross pein exactly like the one you showcased here. Great, well balanced hammer. My daily driver is a 2 1/2 lb. rounding hammer made by Dave Custer.

  • @TheFoleyForge
    @TheFoleyForge 2 роки тому +1

    My favorite blacksmith and blacksmith youtuber!

  • @olddawgdreaming5715
    @olddawgdreaming5715 2 роки тому +1

    Good info about differences in hammers and the things they cause John. Totally agree about the handle fitting your hand. Keep up the great videos and I'll be watching for your Sunday video. Fred.

  • @stevemoore5053
    @stevemoore5053 2 роки тому +1

    Very good!

  • @howardrichburg2398
    @howardrichburg2398 2 роки тому +1

    My main hammer us a HF 2 lb hammer I dressed up to be a flat/rounding hammer. Modified the handle to fit my hands. Been good for about 4 yrs now.

  • @ericcartrette6118
    @ericcartrette6118 2 роки тому +2

    My main hammer is a Peddinghouse 1000g cross pein. I recently replaced the handle. I like their hammers, but they give you a tree trunk for a handle! I thought it was working out until my hand started throbbing every night after I had been in the forge. I noticed that I was holding the hammer with a death grip while forging. I thinned down the handle. Now I hold it much more loosely when forging and most of the pain has gone away. I may still thin it down a little more, but I'm not sure yet. So, yeah, pay attention to how tightly you are holding your hammer. It is a good indication that you may need to thin the handle down some.

  • @waylandforge8704
    @waylandforge8704 2 роки тому +1

    I have a wardrobe full of jackets and shirts with a burn hole in exactly the same place. It's nice to have something in common 👍😂🇦🇺

  • @patshes1951
    @patshes1951 2 роки тому +1

    Cool hammers and the info thank you sir.

  • @danbailey5503
    @danbailey5503 2 роки тому +1

    John at Old Hickory Forge makes an amazing hammer. You should check out one of his. I have several of them.

  • @erotdaman
    @erotdaman Рік тому +1

    I have one thing that i never heard someone mention. Thats the radius ground on the hammer face in relationship to the center point of gravity. The best way to test this is with the hammer head loose from the handle and try balancing it on its face. If it have balance all the way to the edges the radius should be right. With that in mind a longer hammer should have a bigger, flatter radius and shorter more stubby hammer should have a smaler more round radius. That gives the hammer less strange recoils after every hit. Any reflections about that?

    • @erotdaman
      @erotdaman Рік тому

      @blackbearforge

    • @erotdaman
      @erotdaman Рік тому

      The advantages of this face shape is less vibrations to the handle and easier to keep the aim between strikes.

  • @victorfiori105
    @victorfiori105 2 роки тому +1

    My favorite hammer is my 3lb czech style with a hofi style handle from Jackpine forge. It's a truly beautiful hammer. I recently bought a Picard hammer because it was cheap just to try out.

  • @maxtrehus602
    @maxtrehus602 2 роки тому +2

    Great video John! Im about to make myself a diagonal peen hammer from a hunk of polish rod (piston steel they call it, its 1045) i scrapped from an old pumping unit.

  • @dadegroot
    @dadegroot 2 роки тому +1

    My main hammer is a 2.1lb Hofi-style crosspein by Seth Wood. I have a french style 3lb one from him too, and an almost 2ln rounding cross-pein I made myself (wrought iron with 1040 forge welded faces).

  • @thewaylonandjoeshow9540
    @thewaylonandjoeshow9540 2 роки тому +1

    John, check out the hammers from Old Hickory Forge. He makes awesome hammers and tooling.

  • @markmoreno7295
    @markmoreno7295 2 роки тому +1

    I don’t have too many hammers yet, but I am still collecting. I love hammers. I have a few favorites but my most recent addition is a 2 lb rounding hammer. What I like best about this one is the large handle and eye. It just feels good. I did have to shave it down some but I prefer beefy handles over skinny spindly ones. This hammer is made by Brandon Lee Dearing over at HandAndHammers. Will it become my daily driver? Not sure yet. I have another hammer made in the Elmer Roush style but by Ethan Harty. It is also a very nice hammer. David Custer at Firey Furnace Forge also made me a
    couple of hammers. Both are very useful. One is a 3.5 lb one and the other a 2.25lb one. I use the lighter one much more often. The big one is for stubborn stuff. I also have a double diagonal peen hammer made by Elijah Williams. Beautifully rustic in its appearance I hope I find projects where it may come in handy. Each hammer is a work of art.

  • @markmcmeen287
    @markmcmeen287 2 роки тому +2

    Always benefit from your videos. Thanks for your comments on some of those "designer" hammers. Any comments of comparison with the Hofi hammer? Thank you

  • @ruberbandengineer9618
    @ruberbandengineer9618 2 місяці тому

    This man is awesome

  • @glencrandall7051
    @glencrandall7051 2 роки тому +1

    My goodness, there is way more to the hammer than one would have thought. And John is just talking blacksmith hammers. What about carpenters hammers, metalsmiths hammers, etc.There is no end to it.🙂🙂

  • @wayneheitz8390
    @wayneheitz8390 2 роки тому +1

    Great video and some intrigue. 🤣👏👏

  • @jackdawg4579
    @jackdawg4579 2 роки тому +1

    I really dont like a lot of the custom hammers blacksmiths make these days. I do like a lot of vintage hammers. I am currently using some larger examples of vintage cobblers hammers as my go to hammers, I like them a lot.

  • @BurntMushroomBlacksmithing
    @BurntMushroomBlacksmithing 2 роки тому +2

    Good stuff. I'm used to using the average cross peens, and home modded drilling hammers. I'm curious about big blue hammers, the Picard smithing hammer, and the French style cross peens. That, and those popular Alec Steele style rounding hammers. 🍻

  • @Moondog-wc4vm
    @Moondog-wc4vm 2 роки тому +1

    I'm guessing that a smith's favourite hammer is just like Trigger's broom. Multiple heads and multiple handles. It's still the same tool though. Works just like it should do.

  • @swblacksmith.7445
    @swblacksmith.7445 2 роки тому

    Hi John,
    Hammers would be one of my favourite subjects. I have more hammer in the rack than whats practical but sometimes having a wide selection is handy.
    Thanks for sharing your thoughts, of the hammers you had in your video I'm partial to the Brent Bailey cross peen. I find a weighted back hammer a joy to use as long as the diameter of the face isn't too large.
    kind regards. Seth.

  • @JarlSeamus
    @JarlSeamus 2 роки тому +1

    I have a half dozen styles in another half dozen weights. I really wanted to love the swedish pattern hammers but they are very unwieldy with the distance from face to eye being so long. I've found German pattern's fit me better, but a French hammer is my go-to now. The face is very close to the eye and I can use a heavier head for longer due to this, with more control. Ironically, my second most used hammer is an old yard sale find 32 oz Ball Peen.... The handle just "fit" my hand and the balance was perfect for me.

  • @frankgaletzka8477
    @frankgaletzka8477 2 роки тому +1

    Hello John
    It is as always in German
    Es ist besser es zu haben als es zu brauchen und nicht zu haben.
    It is better to have it than try to use it and dont have it.
    The Hammer is a very personel thing .
    It is a very important tool .
    Thank you for the little overview.
    Take care
    Greetings yours Frank Galetzka

  • @Bangalangs
    @Bangalangs 2 роки тому

    Another excellent video sir. The hammer collection is growing in my shop. How about a hammer storage system for a future video?

  • @MASI_forging
    @MASI_forging 11 місяців тому

    Incredible 😊😊

  • @brianpartribge5175
    @brianpartribge5175 2 роки тому +1

    My first and last hammer was an estwing from home depot, the rubber handle turned gummy and sticky.

  • @deryiousbarzee627
    @deryiousbarzee627 2 роки тому +2

    Good morning

  • @aaronkokesch3593
    @aaronkokesch3593 2 роки тому

    Have you ever tried doing a leather wrapped handle or dimpling the handle with a drill bit for extra grip? For about 2 years after I broke my thumb I was having issues with pain and a lack if strength due to the injury. I tried the dimpling technique after seeing Tom Silva on this old house do it to his framing hammers for grip in wet conditions. I got sold on the idea and find it really comfortable now and makes swinging my heavier hammers a bit easier. My hatchets I do a leather wrap in natural veg tan and that works wonderfully to fatten the handle for my large hands as well.

    • @BlackBearForge
      @BlackBearForge  2 роки тому +1

      I have used tape like you might tape a hockey stick. But haven't tried leather. That might be a good way to add mass to the thin handle.

    • @aaronkokesch3593
      @aaronkokesch3593 2 роки тому

      @@BlackBearForge it does work well for adding mass. Plus its great for using up rough, ugly leather... i mean... leather that has character that isn't suited for nicer projects. Seen some where people have put cordage or banding under the leather for added mass and grip. All I have really done so far is a single solid square piece to wrap and did a saddle stich on the front. Super basic. To finish I use a leather balm.

  • @k.c.meaders4811
    @k.c.meaders4811 2 роки тому +2

    I found that reforging Harbor Freight "engineer's Hammers" is a quick way to get a variety of useful hammers; cross pien, straight pied, diagonal...etc. AND as the handles are too long, so they can be sawn off the hammer and then reused on the new one. Maybe not the best, but one 2# hammer cost less than 2# of 4140 and already has an eye!

  • @smash5967
    @smash5967 2 роки тому

    On the hammer with the thin handle, have you considered wrapping the handle with leather or a thin rope or something?

  • @multicoloredwiz
    @multicoloredwiz 2 роки тому +1

    Hah, he hit us with the TO BE CONTINUED...!

  • @CaptCorpMURICA
    @CaptCorpMURICA 2 роки тому +1

    Looks like he got the Christ Centered Iron Works Treadle Hammer.

  • @mymikeysbeefarm3606
    @mymikeysbeefarm3606 9 місяців тому

    You can wrap with leather

  • @mytwocoins
    @mytwocoins 2 роки тому +1

    I think I could easily fall down the “hammer hole” as anything made by hand attracts me.
    I’m not sure I qualify as a smith at this point, I’m working on my first project now which is going to be my fire rake made from a rail spike.

  • @colmortimer1066
    @colmortimer1066 2 роки тому

    I would have thought by now you would have progressed to the point you just make your own hammers, and prefer using those, as you can customize it how ever you wanted. But that might be more about just how good a very well made hammer can be, even if it is not perfectly what you would want.

  • @kenbultman8670
    @kenbultman8670 2 роки тому

    John you have a lot great ideas, but how about making something for the farmers like a bail hook.

    • @kenbultman8670
      @kenbultman8670 2 роки тому

      Could you get tee shirts with a pocket

  • @FamTech.
    @FamTech. 2 роки тому +2

    I like your video's

  • @bandcshow11d6
    @bandcshow11d6 Рік тому

    Check out Michael Hoops hammers

  • @Elderos5
    @Elderos5 Рік тому

    Laminating the handle of your thin handled hammer would work but but could be messy. Might I suggest wrapping the handle with a leather thong. You can control the thickness of the thong, if you have a strap cutter and a piece of leather, if a standard off the shelf thong isn't the size you like. If the leather wears out before the handle does, just wrap it again. Good luck with that in any case.

  • @oldmanjimh3165
    @oldmanjimh3165 Рік тому

    What hammers do you use when shaping and bending softer materials so not to cause unnecessary dinging.

  • @AnonYmous-ii4tc
    @AnonYmous-ii4tc 2 роки тому +2

    +1 to building up to a bigger hammer and fitting your handle properly. Tendinitis sucks…

  • @hannesmoser2732
    @hannesmoser2732 2 роки тому

    wrap it with a tennis rack handle wrap

  • @Kevintherubiconjeep
    @Kevintherubiconjeep 2 роки тому

    Grrr youtube. Subscribed with bell on and this is the first video in my feed in months and months. Thought you maybe took time off or something. Guess i have some watching todo :)

    • @BlackBearForge
      @BlackBearForge  2 роки тому

      It seems to be a glitchy system between UA-cam, Cell carriers and individual device setting lots of them seem to get lost. But there has been nearly one per week for quite some time. Enjoy catching up 😉

  • @bunyanforgings7849
    @bunyanforgings7849 Рік тому

    Hi John. Whatever happened to that rounding hammer Daniel Moss sent you? Cheers.

    • @BlackBearForge
      @BlackBearForge  Рік тому

      Its still in the shop. I use it as a light striking hammer

  • @robbullis5025
    @robbullis5025 2 роки тому +1

    I would do the laminate on that skinny hammer handle. Gorilla glue well keep it there for ever.

  • @flatlander6734
    @flatlander6734 2 роки тому +1

    Ever try a Hofi hammer?

  • @jeffreyjones6409
    @jeffreyjones6409 2 роки тому

    At 2:46, "Do I need all these hammers?" Yes, yes we do.......shhhhh............... don't tell my wife. Just kidding...........

  • @torchofkck4989
    @torchofkck4989 2 роки тому

    When ReDressing a hammer face,
    What would a legitimate reason for
    building up material with hardened
    welding rods ?
    Know a couple people who have some with & rest without...
    When I asked, they just said "personal preference for the
    job (at hand)."
    [Giving no real answer]
    What would be your insight on this ?

    • @BlackBearForge
      @BlackBearForge  2 роки тому +1

      I have never had a hammer that I would be tempted to add material to. Simply grinding out any mushrooming or blemishes should keep a hammer in usable shape for years. But I also understand that personal preference is often arbitrary and can't be defined with a real reason.

    • @torchofkck4989
      @torchofkck4989 2 роки тому

      @@BlackBearForge ,
      Thanks for the response.
      I'm trying to find out what their
      meaning behind their madness,
      If it is legit ?
      Thanks again.

  • @demastust.2277
    @demastust.2277 2 роки тому +1

    I like to buy cheap hammers and modify them to suit my taste.

  • @nosrin1988
    @nosrin1988 4 місяці тому

    what makes a good hammer? an expensive hammer? Shape? Material? Hardness? When is it worth spending 200 on a hammer over a 10 dollar harbor freight hammer that you reshape yourself?

    • @BlackBearForge
      @BlackBearForge  4 місяці тому +1

      Balance and a handle that stays put are probably the most important. Proper head shape and hardness are probably next. Most $10 hammers probably fail on most of those points,but a $40 hammer from a blacksmithing tool supplier will probably be fine. Buying hammers from other blacksmiths that specialize in making hammers will probably be a noticeable step up in comfort and control. But mostly its just a way to help support your fellow blacksmiths.

    • @nosrin1988
      @nosrin1988 4 місяці тому

      @@BlackBearForge ya! the handle staying on would definitely sound like the most important! lol
      but that's good to know! Always trying to learn more stuff about the crafting hobbies! thanks!

  • @JacksonDunnoKnows
    @JacksonDunnoKnows 2 роки тому +5

    Weakness.... yes. Lol!

  • @FourDollaRacing
    @FourDollaRacing Рік тому

    If you need to scratch an itch, just *burn* a *hole* in your jacket 🔥, and you won't have any money 💸 left in your wallet to spend! 🤣

  • @damonbrown5233
    @damonbrown5233 2 роки тому +1

    I buy any interesting hammer I run across at antique stores and such if it's a good price 😏