Hammers are for pounding, but they don't all pound the same things. Know the types of hammers out there so you can choose the right one.
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Choosing a Hammer
Whether it’s used for pounding, tapping, driving nails or pulling them out, tradespeople and DIY home improvement enthusiasts alike need hammers.
Considering what a simple tool it is, it’s amazing how many types of hammers you can find. A complete list of hammers would have more than 30 types. If you include Thor’s hammer and Maxwell’s silver one, the list gets even longer.
Here, we’ve narrowed the list to the best hammers for home repair and light construction.
Parts of a Hammer
Hammers vary in obvious and subtle ways. To really understand the differences, it helps to know the basic parts. A hammer has more parts than you might expect!
Handle: The length determines the leverage, the thickness determines how easy the hammer is to hold, and the material determines durability. The most common hammer handle materials are wood, fiberglass and rubber-encased steel.
Head: This is the business part of the hammer. The shape and weight of the hammer head largely determine its usefulness for particular tasks.
Face: The part that contacts the surface you’re pounding. Hammer faces vary in size and shape. Some are serrated or textured, and some are smooth.
Throat: This connects the face to the rest of the hammer head. It may be long or short. Ot, in the case of a sledgehammer, there may not be one at all.
Neck: The part that connects to the handle. Length and diameter vary from hammer to hammer.
Eye: This is the part of the head that slips over the handle. Hammers with wooden handles, as well as some with steel handles, have eyes.
Cheek: The side of the hammer head. The cheeks of some hammers — particularly Japanese ones — can be used for pounding when you’re short on clearance.
Claws: If a hammer has claws, they extend outward from the rear of the head. They can be straight or curved, and the ends may or may not taper to points.
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Utility Claw Hammer
This category includes claw hammers. They vary in several respects, but all have certain features in common. The head typically weighs from 14 to 18 ounces, and a narrow throat ends in a wider, flat, smooth face. Curved claws extend from the rear of the head.
Irwin’s General Purpose Claw Hammer is a popular example. The fiberglass handle and rubber grip make it a good everyday, around-the-house hammer.
A framing hammer resembles a utility claw hammer, only with a heavier head (from 22 to 24 ounces), a longer handle and straight claws. It’s best for pounding 16d and larger nails, so it has a short throat and a serrated face that won’t slip off the nail head. The serrations leave nasty dents in wood, so this hammer isn’t suitable for light-duty jobs.
Another variation of the claw hammer design, an electrician’s hammer has a mid-weight head and a straight claw. Its distinguishing feature is an extra-long throat that lets the head reach into deeper cavities than other claw hammerss.
If you’re doing demolition or serious yard work — think pounding stakes or crushing rocks — you need a sledgehammer. The double-faced steel head, typically weighing 12 pounds or more, is made for bludgeoning and not much else. The three-foot handle helps you develop maximum leverage.
Sledgehammer heads mounted on wooden handles frequently slip off. You won’t have that problem with the one-piece Fiskars Double-Face Sledgehammer. You won’t experience much user fatigue, either, because the shock-control handle absorbs vibrations.
Also known as a dead-blow or mini sledgehammer, a club hammer has a two- to three-pound sledge-like head mounted on a 10- to 12-inch handle. It’s good for chiseling and breaking up stone, tile and similar materials.
The Alltrade Club Hammer is an Amazon top choice. The head is permanently bonded to the shock-absorbing fiberglass handle, and the non-slip rubber handle minimizes user fatigue while facilitating accuracy. These are important because this isn’t a hammer you want slipping out of your hands in mid-swing.
Also known as a machinist’s hammer, the ball-peen hammer has two pounding faces on opposite sides of the head, one flat and one ball-shaped. The rounded face shapes metal (peening). The flat face can do anything a standard claw hammer face can do.
Ball-peen hammers come in weights from four to 32 ounces; heavy ones can double as club hammers for chiseling work. The 16-ounce Real Steel Ball-Peen Hammer is a mid-range choice that’s good for metalwork and chiseling.
When you need to tap things together without damaging them, you need a rubber mallet. They’re good for laminating and gluing boards in the wood shop, coaxing floorboards together, tapping bricks or pavers into the sand and putting a lid back on a paint can.
To do any work at all, the rubber head with its opposing flat faces needs some weight. The Tekton 16-ounce Rubber Mallet has all the bulk you need plus a lightweight, easy-grip handle.
If you do any brick work around the house or in the yard, you’ll need a mason’s hammer. One end of the head has a smooth, flat face for tapping, and the other a long chisel-like head for breaking bricks and cutting into mortar.
A dual-purpose hatchet hammer, sometimes called a wood-splitting maul, comes in handy whether you’re on a camping trip or in your backyard. The head incorporates a hatchet on one end, which is handy for split logs into kindling among other things. The flat-face hammer on the other end is good for pounding stakes and much more.
The Estwing Fireside Friend is one of the most highly-rated models on Amazon (4.8 stars). Its heavy-duty construction and ergonomic handle make it a great choice
Tired of hitting your fingers when pounding tacks and small nails? If so, you need a tack hammer.
It features opposing flat faces on the end of long, tapered throats, with one face magnetized. Pick up and set individual tacks or nails with the magnetized head, then turn the hammer around to pound them in. Your fingers stay out of the way.
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