Acetal Faced Machinist Hammer

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Acetal Faced Machinist Hammer

Home Forums Beginners questions Acetal Faced Machinist Hammer

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  • #9696
    Blue Heeler
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      @blueheeler
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      #412137
      Blue Heeler
      Participant
        @blueheeler

        G'day all,

        What's the best method of attaching black acetal to a machinist hammer(s) that I'd like to make.

        Thinking of making two, one the middle part brass faced with two acetal ends and one aluminium with two acetal ends.

        #412138
        Boiler Bri
        Participant
          @boilerbri

          Hello. I would not use acetol for a hammer face as it chips and fractures easily. Try HDPE as its more flexible and less likely to chip off.

          My soft face hammers are threaded to hold the replaceable faces.

          Bri

          #412139
          Blue Heeler
          Participant
            @blueheeler

            Thanks for the heads up in regards to HDPE.

             

            Cheers

            Jim

            P.S just looked up the eBay listing in my purchase history, I bought this as a batch of offcuts in 2017 and it is listed as HDPE

            Edited By Blue Heeler on 02/06/2019 05:35:25

            Edited By Blue Heeler on 02/06/2019 05:35:47

            #412346
            old mart
            Participant
              @oldmart

              Nylon is commonly used for heads.

              #412591
              Ian Johnson 1
              Participant
                @ianjohnson1

                Yes HDPE is good for a hammer head, years ago I made a small machinists hammer with a brass head and the other head was made from PTFE (Teflon) both held in by two small grub screws, occasionally need tightening up but works very well, the PTFE is especially good at not marking delicate components.

                Ian

                #412592
                Mike Poole
                Participant
                  @mikepoole82104

                  I think hide and copper take a lot of beating for soft faces, no pun intended.

                  Mike

                  #412614
                  Bazyle
                  Participant
                    @bazyle
                    Posted by old mart on 03/06/2019 09:49:44:

                    Nylon is commonly used for heads.

                    I find wood the most common – Oh you're still talking about hammers. smiley

                    #412616
                    Dalboy
                    Participant
                      @dalboy

                      HDPE can be found everywhere about you and can be molded to shape, just don't use the house oven to do it. Woodworkers have made carving mallets from plastic milk bottle tops and even pens which can be turned

                      Edited By Derek Lane 2 on 04/06/2019 18:48:16

                      #412694
                      Hopper
                      Participant
                        @hopper

                        The usual method of attachment is to make the body (usually steel) with a female thread tapped into each side, about half the diameter of the head. The plastic face then is machined up with suitable step and the smaller diameter either screwcut or die-threaded to screw into the body. Coarse thread such as BSW or metric coarse series works best on the plastics. Be sure the threaded part is short enough that the plastic face part seats on the back of the face with no gap.

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