Rich2502 | 30/06/2022 18:46:03 |
83 forum posts 3 photos | I have acquired a copper hammer with no inserts, I know nothing about casting and only want to roughly cast these two heads, what would be the easiest way to do it with common items?
One thing I have got is a copper recycling bin so no shortage of metal.
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noel shelley | 30/06/2022 19:12:07 |
2308 forum posts 33 photos | Starting from nothing it would be cheaper to buy them. The list of things you would need is a very long one ! and also the skill to be able to run a furnace, make the molds Etc ! Good Luck Noel. |
Simon Williams 3 | 30/06/2022 19:25:26 |
728 forum posts 90 photos |
x Lead's a lot easier. Just sayin'
Rgds Simon |
JohnF | 30/06/2022 19:38:03 |
![]() 1243 forum posts 202 photos | Just search for Thor hammer spares and you can buy the copper or hide inserts for a few pounds -- not worth the trouble of making them I think John PS Simon like the lead casting method ! I cast lots of lead bench vice jaws. |
Simon Williams 3 | 30/06/2022 19:42:57 |
728 forum posts 90 photos | FWIW I played much the same tune on an old (hammer), though my ambition fell short of casting copper . But I did discover that their fitting is essentially a one trick pony, as the cast iron head is crimped around the copper insert to hold it in place. Un crimping cast iron isn't going to work. I'm guessing casting in situ with copper is dodgy. 1093C melting point is going to be interesting, no? I imagine the insert - if annealed - would retreat into the original tapered socket if hammered home enthusiastically, I haven't tried it. If it is of any interest I found the thread where I played with this, and got (as ever) detailed advice about what I'd taken on courtesy of the forum. Here's the link. Do let us know how you get on. |
Robert Butler | 30/06/2022 20:53:26 |
511 forum posts 6 photos | With no inserts is it a copper hammer? Robert Butler |
pgk pgk | 30/06/2022 22:47:48 |
2661 forum posts 294 photos | Out of interest: If one were to mix pieces of lead with copper chips while heating the lead to it’s melt point and giving it a stir before pouring into a mould... pgk |
Simon Williams 3 | 30/06/2022 22:57:20 |
728 forum posts 90 photos | PGK's following a line of reasoning I've been chewing over most of the evening. The problem with using lead is that, while it's cheap and easily obtained, its shortcomings as a hammer material are obvious. So what alloys with it to make a harder, more durable material without passing into the realms of red-hotness and its attendant dangers? Tin is one such. But it's expensive and AFAIK difficult to obtain, at least in the quantities desired. I've never worked with Woods metal - though the prospect of a hammer which melted in the sun is an interesting concept. How hard is it at room temperature I wonder? Silver/lead solders get a rotten press, might be just the thing here! £ouch! Do we have any metalurgists aboard?
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noel shelley | 30/06/2022 23:15:47 |
2308 forum posts 33 photos | ANTIMONY ! Noel |
Simon Williams 3 | 30/06/2022 23:18:13 |
728 forum posts 90 photos | Where to buy it? And how much per (say) kilo? Simon Edited By Simon Williams 3 on 30/06/2022 23:20:49 And (looking at its properties on Wikiarsenic) would one be better off with the perils of 1000+ degC?
Edited By Simon Williams 3 on 30/06/2022 23:22:48 |
Michael Gilligan | 30/06/2022 23:43:17 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Copper is a good material for the job [with a nice balance of properties] but personally, I prefer screw-in plastic faces on a lead-shot weighted head. [of the hammer, that is !] MichaelG. |
Simon Williams 3 | 01/07/2022 00:26:35 |
728 forum posts 90 photos |
Coincidence. Honestly! |
John Olsen | 01/07/2022 02:51:07 |
1294 forum posts 108 photos 1 articles | Speaking as someone who owns two copper faced hammers, I'm not actually all that convinced about the value of them Copper work hardens, to the extent that it will bruise mild steel. Since the whole point of a softer faced hammer is to avoid bruising things, it seems to me that lead or plastic is actually a far better bet. So mine are mostly of historic interest...they were made from pieces of copper locomotive boiler stays. I keep meaning to buy one of those hammers with lead on one face and plastic on the other, but so far mostly just put a piece of wood in between the hammer and the item that needs persuading. John |
Martin Kyte | 01/07/2022 09:37:55 |
![]() 3445 forum posts 62 photos | Mine has Hide on the opposite end. regards Martin |
Mark Rand | 01/07/2022 09:38:05 |
1505 forum posts 56 photos | Posted by Simon Williams 3 on 30/06/2022 19:42:57:
FWIW I played much the same tune on an old (hammer), though my ambition fell short of casting copper . But I did discover that their fitting is essentially a one trick pony, as the cast iron head is crimped around the copper insert to hold it in place. Un crimping cast iron isn't going to work.
They're malleable iron, not grey iron. Thor give a drawing of a suitable press tool for expanding and contracting the heads with their fitting instructions on the web site. I do find that the rawhide ends are more useful for a lot of things than the copper ends. The youf of today look at you askance when you talk about 'soft hammers' |
noel shelley | 01/07/2022 09:59:46 |
2308 forum posts 33 photos | YOUF ! it goes with their soft life ! Noel. |
Nicholas Farr | 01/07/2022 10:01:13 |
![]() 3988 forum posts 1799 photos | Hi, I made the tools as per Thor's instructions for swaging the hammer for fitting new hide's, but when trying to open the rim big enough to get a new hide in, the rim fractured and some of it broke away. I did though, acquire a second hand hammer that had a loose dried out hide, which actually broke up and fell out after many uses and the rim just happened to be just wide enough to squeeze my new hide in the above photo and it was successfully crimped in using the closing tool without any fracturing. To be honest though, the hassle of replacing these is more trouble than they are worth, in my opinion. Regards Nick. |
Juddy | 01/07/2022 10:33:53 |
![]() 131 forum posts | Lead fumes are highly toxic, be careful casting lead |
Hopper | 01/07/2022 10:47:55 |
![]() 7881 forum posts 397 photos | Copper hammers are traditionally used for belting motorcycle flywheels into alignment. But they do, as mentioned above, tend to work harden and leave "babies' bums" on the steel flywheel rims. I like Phil Irving's (designer of the Vincent) suggestion to instead swing the flywheels, held in hand by the rods, against either a lead or hardwood block firmly attached to the bench. Much more sensible. When I worked on full-sized steam turbines, we cast our own lead hammers using a piece of 6" pipe split as a mould and a bit of 1" pipe as handle. They worked well but deformed very quickly. They came complete with a monstrous 6'2" Albanian tradesman's assistant who loved nothing better than to swing them as hard as he could until they were a mangled mess. Edited By Hopper on 01/07/2022 10:52:20 |
Michael Gilligan | 01/07/2022 10:50:17 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Posted by Nicholas Farr on 01/07/2022 10:01:13:
Hi, I made the tools as per Thor's instructions […] . Thanks for the link, Nick … I agree with you conclusion !! Time for the forum to devise a better repair-scheme ? MichaelG.
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