I picked up this (relatively) small hammer at a yard sale today... It seems very well made, and is stamped "CHAMPION DeARMENT" (no, I didn't miss a "P" and the "E" is capital, but smaller than the others, like DeWalt) but I'm unfamiliar with the purpose of the pein on this one... It looks as if someone took a normal cross pein, and ground out a semi-circle leaving a fairly sharp edge. But it was definitely manufactured this way...
Does anyone know what I have here?
Thanks
(http://i137.photobucket.com/albums/q226/Midnight_Fenrir/Camera/IMG_20170506_155927_zpss2zhmrkf.jpg)
Huh. It looks like a standard tinner's hammer - are you sure the grind on the cross pein is factory?
Quote from: Bill Houghton on May 08, 2017, 02:02:52 PM
Huh. It looks like a standard tinner's hammer - are you sure the grind on the cross pein is factory?
Pretty sure... I'm having trouble with my phone uploading the other two pictures I have, one of which shows the pein more clearly, I'll fiddle with it some more when I get a chance this evening.
If it's not factory, it was done by a skilled machinist.
Would later be known as the Channellock Company. From the picture I see it looks like a tinners hammer that was chipped and ground.
Okay, here's a shot of the pein...
What I would expect to be a positive curved surface is concave instead...
(http://i137.photobucket.com/albums/q226/Midnight_Fenrir/IMG_20170506_155938_zps4lzz2mta.jpg)
Well, that is a puzzle. Getting comfy on the easy chair to watch the discussion here - no idea what that shape would be optimal for.
Rolled? Hemmed? Edge on sheet metal????
To finish or close a wire edge.
Seems to me I just had a pliers or tongs marked the same? in the fall of last year?
According to the EAIA Toolmaker's Directory, made between 1927 and 1960.
Quote from: oldgoaly on May 09, 2017, 03:20:34 PM
To finish or close a wire edge.
Seems to me I just had a pliers or tongs marked the same? in the fall of last year?
Is that a guess, or a definitive answer? Certainly sounds plausible. Though I wonder how useful it would be on curved surfaces...
Quote from: wvtools on May 09, 2017, 04:42:14 PM
According to the EAIA Toolmaker's Directory, made between 1927 and 1960.
Yeah, I did a little research on that end... Champion DeArment was previously a small smithy that grew to become the Champion Bolt and Clipper Company. In 1923 the company moved to a larger facility, and changed their name to Champion DeArment Tool Company. Then, in 1963 they changed their name again to Channellock, capitalizing on the ubiquity of their patented grove-joint pliers.
Educated guess, haven't seen one like that, but have done lots of wired edges. You are taught to use the chisel end, so did it work? probably wasn't a big seller. Some people modify a linesman's pliers to finish the wired edge, there is a hand cranked set of dies for the easy edgers / jenny's. Probably the closest thing I have seen to the end is the a set of pullmax dies I made to finish the wired edge on a late 20's Chrysler fenders. I've got ??? about 5 or 6 tinner's hammers none with a concave edge.
Quote from: oldgoaly on May 09, 2017, 05:42:34 PM
Educated guess, haven't seen one like that, but have done lots of wired edges. You are taught to use the chisel end, so did it work? probably wasn't a big seller. Some people modify a linesman's pliers to finish the wired edge, there is a hand cranked set of dies for the easy edgers / jenny's. Probably the closest thing I have seen to the end is the a set of pullmax dies I made to finish the wired edge on a late 20's Chrysler fenders. I've got ??? about 5 or 6 tinner's hammers none with a concave edge.
Very interesting, thanks!