HYDRAULIC PRESS AND SLEDGEHAMMERS, MODERN AND ANTIQUE

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 11 тыс.

  • @mikldude9376
    @mikldude9376 Месяц назад +8247

    That old hammer was built to a standard , where the Chinese hammer was built to a price .
    Nice to see the old one back to its former glory .

    • @GardenGuy1942
      @GardenGuy1942 Месяц назад +91

      They both held 100 tons…..

    • @ramrod9556
      @ramrod9556 Месяц назад +295

      I would like to see a new American hammer and see if the quality is the same as it was.

    • @K0nc3pt10n
      @K0nc3pt10n Месяц назад +191

      @@GardenGuy1942 I think the other half of the standard is ...and maintains its shape

    • @MelodicTurtleMetal
      @MelodicTurtleMetal Месяц назад

      ​@@ramrod9556new American hammer - made in China, assembled in USA. $200

    • @Roger-go6jc
      @Roger-go6jc Месяц назад +168

      @@GardenGuy1942 Watch again. You call that holding shape for the Chinese hammer? Try fitting a new handle to it...can I be there when you do try.. I need some comic relief!

  • @TheBearJew1309
    @TheBearJew1309 Месяц назад +5917

    Back then, the foundry's competed to make the hardest, strongest steel possible across the board. Now they compete to find the 'minimum viable product'

    • @Abercrombemonkey
      @Abercrombemonkey Месяц назад +90

      Mjölnir

    • @cal920c
      @cal920c Месяц назад

      That’s the cheap-cheap lowest bidder mentality society has gotten into.

    • @country_boy9180
      @country_boy9180 Месяц назад +168

      Not even close. It a hardened chisel or drill is hit with a hardened hammer, and something is likely to shatter. Both the heads of chisels/ bits and the hammer need to be some what soft. Now strong is good, it will reduce mushrooming. US sledgehammers are made in medium and soft even today. Medium is most common, but soft is available. And if you want softer, brass is available in many designs.
      I don’t think legacy hammers are any better that current US production ( say Vaughn, Eastwing, Nupla). There was certainly junk made back then if for no other reason than poorer control of their metallurgy from melting scrap.

    • @cowboy_henk
      @cowboy_henk Месяц назад +231

      This is survivorship bias. A million garbage hammers were made alongside some very good ones, and only the very good ones become functional antiques while the others hit the landfill.
      Also I think the cheap hammer is gonna work just fine as long as you need to generate less than 40 tons of force

    • @higado2
      @higado2 Месяц назад +14

      EXACTLY! And it seems to be the same for almost all products! Hehehe

  • @AntiseptischerQuarkwickel
    @AntiseptischerQuarkwickel 2 месяца назад +11145

    Chinese hammer is not made out of steel. Its 100% chinesium.

    • @bassmaster9781
      @bassmaster9781 2 месяца назад +448

      This one made me laugh real hard 😂😂😂

    • @rocketman63
      @rocketman63 2 месяца назад +323

      Thanks for clarifying; I always figured Chinese tools were made of cheese.😊

    • @dapsapsrp
      @dapsapsrp 2 месяца назад +76

      You beat me to it.

    • @_Fox-bg3lb
      @_Fox-bg3lb 2 месяца назад +55

      LOL

    • @ralphreinhardt6020
      @ralphreinhardt6020 2 месяца назад +249

      So true, imagine. Their tanks and air craft carriers are made of that stuff too.

  • @MrBahjatt
    @MrBahjatt 12 дней назад +37

    I appreciate the fit and finish of the old hammer. It looks a piece of fine craftsmanship and not just for utility. It has an artistic finish.

  • @ShawnMoreland317
    @ShawnMoreland317 Месяц назад +7613

    The literal definition of "They don't make em like they used to".

    • @ericaugust1501
      @ericaugust1501 Месяц назад +160

      i wonder if they alloyed lead into their iron for more weight, hence its softer. arguably this is a type of design thinking to produce something more practical than just a block of steel. because for example, if you don't need something strong enough to stand up to 100 tons, but just need a regular, weight focused sledge, with attention paid to price point, the chinese sledge should be your first pick. to clarify my example. imagine buying a F1 formula car for driving around town to get groceries. could you really afford do that?

    • @F15EX_Eagle_II
      @F15EX_Eagle_II Месяц назад +74

      @@ericaugust1501well, the fact that the metal started bending at only 30 tones shows that it will wear down and bend much before the solid steel/iron hammer

    • @ericaugust1501
      @ericaugust1501 Месяц назад +65

      @@F15EX_Eagle_II won't your arms fall off well before you could deliver anything even close to 30 tons?

    • @xanghost2659
      @xanghost2659 Месяц назад +10

      That's because THEY didn't make it.

    • @williamblackfyre4866
      @williamblackfyre4866 Месяц назад +42

      ​@@ericaugust1501.....whose arms? If the sledge is bought by a demolition company, its going to be used by multiple people. In which case the solid sledge is going to give you more production over a longer period of time.

  • @JCMills55
    @JCMills55 2 месяца назад +5456

    I love that you restored the American hammer. It'll be good to go for another 100 years now.

    • @chrisgraham2904
      @chrisgraham2904 Месяц назад +168

      "Good for another 100 years", until it needs to be refurbished again.

    • @t16205
      @t16205 Месяц назад +252

      @@chrisgraham2904 That thing can last forever

    • @jeffstorm
      @jeffstorm Месяц назад +159

      Just for grins and giggles, I would have cold blued the hammer. It protects from corrosion and looks good too. Hundred years, keep it away from it's worst enemy, corrosion, ittle las a millennia!

    • @Raftjumper07
      @Raftjumper07 Месяц назад +46

      @@jeffstormI was thinking hot bluing or case hardening. Regardless, it is a product of wise metallurgical. 😊

    • @TylerSnyder305
      @TylerSnyder305 Месяц назад +70

      Polishing up an old tool does not a restoration make.
      Besides the faces weren't beveled at the edges to prevent chipping.
      It's not even an American made hammer anyways, this is not an American pattern sledge hammer with a wedge hang oval eye.
      This is a typical eastern European pattern sledge hammer with a large tapered slip fit eye ( think of a tomahawk or pickaxe where the head just slides on from the bottom)
      I do not believe that the person running this channel is in the US, because that modern hammer shaped object is not an American pattern which is what the Chinese and Indian factories export to us here in the states.
      It is again a European pattern.
      I'm pretty sure the guy is in one of the eastern European slavik countries.

  • @bubben4685
    @bubben4685 Месяц назад +1324

    I really want to see more of this for two reasons:
    Old American Sledgehammer vs New American Sledgehammer: To know the quality of Steel difference from back then, and what it's like now days.
    New Chinese Sledgehammer vs New American Sledgehammer: To see the quality of Steel difference between modern day China and USA Steel.
    I would love to see these videos and know what the differences are

    • @HAL-9OOO
      @HAL-9OOO Месяц назад +143

      Antique Chinese sledgehammer vs modern Chinese sledgehammer would also be interesting.

    • @glum6922
      @glum6922 Месяц назад +60

      А что если найти старую советскую кувалду и сравнить со старой американской 🤔

    • @Krzesi28
      @Krzesi28 Месяц назад +29

      There are no more American Sledgehamers nowadays... and the second thing is that the hamer today schould be flexible and not hard to not brake apart.

    • @FiRe-mb5zc
      @FiRe-mb5zc Месяц назад +3

      ​@@HAL-9OOO so Rust against not-yet-rust

    • @HAL-9OOO
      @HAL-9OOO Месяц назад +9

      @@FiRe-mb5zc Maybe? I don't know much about the history of Chinese tools.
      I just think it would be interesting to see stuff about other cultures.

  • @johnbehaylo6704
    @johnbehaylo6704 15 дней назад +2

    Awesome. That’s exactly why I prefer older tools. I’ve gotten many at yard or estate sales for basically nothing and showed them some love.

  • @greavous93
    @greavous93 Месяц назад +2719

    100 tons and the rust scale didnt even fall off! Glad you made a keeper out of it, Id be proud to have that in my hammer drawer.

    • @jamespruitt4756
      @jamespruitt4756 Месяц назад +63

      that's a hammer Hank Hill would be proud of!

    • @TisoyNaJunaidz
      @TisoyNaJunaidz Месяц назад +10

      110tons

    • @User0resU-1
      @User0resU-1 Месяц назад +10

      That's why the whole thing is very suspicious.

    • @squidvis
      @squidvis Месяц назад +31

      ​@@User0resU-1 You new to the world?

    • @joebenson528
      @joebenson528 Месяц назад +9

      @@squidvis
      New to the world of sledgehammers taking 100 tons of pressure. Wouldn't be the first faked hydraulic press or "restoration" video.

  • @Gatekeeper-p6g
    @Gatekeeper-p6g Месяц назад +1830

    Young man you sure DONE that old American Hammer Justice by restoring it! IT looks like it will be Good for another 100 years

    • @tomshatt5440
      @tomshatt5440 Месяц назад +46

      Maybe 200.

    • @bllllood
      @bllllood Месяц назад +8

      @@tomshatt5440 who know...with all the rapid technologies advancement hammers may become obsolete by then

    • @MarikHavair
      @MarikHavair Месяц назад +92

      @@bllllood General rule of law, simple tools never become obsolete, only complicated ones. Computers become obsolete, ships, engines. Hammers are fundamentally the same since literal prehistory.
      The only thing that changed with hammers over all man's industrial and technological revolutions was new methods of driving the hammer, but the hammer itself is the same.

    • @jonathangosnell5504
      @jonathangosnell5504 Месяц назад +14

      10,000 years

    • @bllllood
      @bllllood Месяц назад +4

      @@MarikHavair computers will never become obsolete.....they may be replace by more advance computers but they have become a must have in life..the amount of things they simplify is just too much to ever become obsolete...hammers on the other hand may be replace by mini-hydrolic press//3d printers...or maybe something in the futur which could potentially release a pressure wave that if aimed at something it does like a hammer..basicly same function but more efficient than an hammer....well...difficult to say what await in the futur...and something like a pressure wave could probably be adjust to move large objects as well......maybe we see it b4 dying..or not..who know

  • @bikebobo2472
    @bikebobo2472 12 дней назад +2

    Thank you so much for making that high quality hammer as flashy as new again, I feel so happy for that hammer.

  • @adamjohnson4821
    @adamjohnson4821 Месяц назад +1357

    Now do old USA sledgehammer vs new USA sledgehammer.

    • @Jay-cn3js
      @Jay-cn3js Месяц назад +268

      And a new US hammer vs a old Chinese hammer

    • @adamjohnson4821
      @adamjohnson4821 Месяц назад +43

      Yup very interested to see the difference.

    • @bestprice1776
      @bestprice1776 Месяц назад

      They don't make anything in USA anymore.... Trump 2024 and they might start again

    • @carloko08
      @carloko08 Месяц назад

      @@bestprice1776 HAHAHAH but how many dreamers are there in these written opinions, Trump DID NOT BRING BACK ANY COMPANY OF ANY KIND TO YANKEELAND IN HIS FIRST PERIOD and you think that "now yes" he will do it hahahah, deluded

    • @sigma80
      @sigma80 Месяц назад

      There might be a US made hammer, but 95% chance it uses Chinese steel.
      Still garbage, just finished nicer. All steel today is trash. Sad, but the great makers got driven bankrupt by cheap foreign imports.

  • @liyisu
    @liyisu Месяц назад +406

    As a Chinese (with 20+ years experience in China too), I totally appreciate the quality difference, but I would draw people's attention on this as well: I only use top quality hand tools like Snap-On or Stahlwille myself, but they are sometimes more than 50 times more expensive (sometimes even 100 times mroe) than something you can get from a budget hardware on the roadside, which will do basic jobs exactly the same. For most people, if you only need to touch your screwdriver 4 times a year to tighten some door hinges, quality doesnt mean much to you at all, but price does. You need and you want to spend your money somewhere you think more worthy, like your laptops, your phones, your clothes, etc. the good thing China's mass production these days is that it brought us this: you do have that choice, if you want to go cheap, there is an option for you. when you spend $5 on a sledgehammer like that, you will never use it, or never have an opportunity to use it in a 100 ton environment, right? you just want knock over a few old concrete blocks under your fence. In under 5 ton applications, there is no difference at all. So I see it as a win for the low quality, but the cheap product. $5-5t, or $100-100t, that is your choice, and you now have a choice, right?

    • @Kp-eg5et
      @Kp-eg5et Месяц назад +43

      他们根本不知道一分钱一分货,外贸出口的很多东西的标准是他们自己要求增加或降低,他们大多数买便宜货到欧美价格翻上几倍然后说质量不好……总想一块钱卖到十块钱的质量,不同品牌质量上会有所不同,但你会发现都是中国制造,不是工艺问题根本就是他们不愿意多花钱😂😂😂😂

    • @TonyChance-xq5vg
      @TonyChance-xq5vg Месяц назад +31

      Is it kind of pathetic that you all look at that old sledgehammer with such nostalgia knowing that your own country doesn't manufacture it's own stuff anymore, and even if it did it would cost 10 times more, but then you'd all be complaining about that on your way to Harbor Freight happily filling your carts with tools you all know are made in China. But I guess if you need a sledgehammer that can withstand 100 tons of pressure (none of us do), have at it and disparage that Chinese sledge all you want. But for most of you the 10 buck Pittsburgh sledge would suffice, yes?

    • @liyisu
      @liyisu Месяц назад +14

      @@TonyChance-xq5vg they probably dont know not only Harbour freight, or pittsburgh were made in China Milwaukee, Ridgid (or AEG) or Blue-Point are all made in China. What quality we make the tools with really depends on how pathetic these companies are, and how much they would spend on setting their quality standards. so it really has not much to do with "where it is made", it is about how "pathetic" those companies are, Chinese companies, or American companies, they are all the same, and exactly same rules apply.

    • @sg6152620
      @sg6152620 Месяц назад +17

      the funny thing is that here people are laughing at made in China quality and yet 100% of the port cranes in USA now are made in China. i dont even feel like going into C/P or cognitive bias 🤣

    • @JuneTheCapybara
      @JuneTheCapybara Месяц назад +5

      @@liyisu i wouldnt call it pathetic unless there trying to sell it as a heavy duty tool. if someone spends 5 dollars making a hammer and they sell it for 7 dollars there not exactly trying to scam you there just selling a cheap tool for cheap uses.

  • @kwslife116
    @kwslife116 Месяц назад +1334

    Makes me proud that at least we used to make great things. Thanks for restoring that old beauty

    • @snowfighter62
      @snowfighter62 Месяц назад

      I bet, it was made by European immigrants.

    • @crosswordpuzzle2952
      @crosswordpuzzle2952 Месяц назад +67

      used to make is a good answer.

    • @zvonetomjst
      @zvonetomjst Месяц назад +22

      That's what you think, he's just doing propaganda. This is not an American and Chinese hammer, this is what he added himself. The original recording only shows the difference in quality between then and now!

    • @kwslife116
      @kwslife116 Месяц назад +42

      @@zvonetomjst Getting grumpy in your old age.

    • @scroungasworkshop4663
      @scroungasworkshop4663 Месяц назад +57

      Don’t kid yourself, America still makes some of the best things on the planet. Cheers from Australia 🇦🇺

  • @chizuanchan2557
    @chizuanchan2557 Месяц назад +15

    Old things are always the best, strong and sturdy. 👍

  • @callmebackfriday2
    @callmebackfriday2 Месяц назад +330

    I recently replaced a A/C condenser Fan Motor, it was new A/C unit since 1989 when the house is built. It is still running great except it has a loosen set screw; therefore, I replaced it with a new. The old one is Made in USA by G.E. Yes, the Fan motor still running after 35 years. The quality of America Made products are amazing.

    • @caseyj.1332
      @caseyj.1332 Месяц назад +53

      I worked at the GE plant in Springfield, Missouri in 1974. We turned out thousands of these motors per week. No more, now there are no American made motors.

    • @pimpompoom93726
      @pimpompoom93726 Месяц назад +33

      When you can find genuine US made products, buy them. I always do. Too much low-ball foreign made crap in our stores.

    • @callmebackfriday2
      @callmebackfriday2 Месяц назад +7

      @@caseyj.1332 Very sad but thank you for making such a quality product. By the way, the inside unit - the Blower Motor still blowing hot/cold air after 35 + year. 👍

    • @callmebackfriday2
      @callmebackfriday2 Месяц назад +3

      @@pimpompoom93726 Totally agreed. Another great example is look at all the "old" IBM mainframe machines, how can back to those days, IBM can design and built something that is so amazing which can integrate and run for generations and generations.

    • @Fotosaurus56
      @Fotosaurus56 Месяц назад +33

      I'm 68 years old. My wife has an old American made Sunbeam toaster. I opened it up once to clean it and inside it was dated Feb. 1956. It's older than me, and we still use it. 😊

  • @SDSWrath004
    @SDSWrath004 2 месяца назад +734

    Buy America. I have so many tools from 1890-1970 that have outlasted every new tool I've purchased.

    • @maxz69
      @maxz69 Месяц назад

      And today, dare I say, most American companies get their shit produced in China and sell it as American to turn a buck. And it breaks way faster, which means that you'd have to buy it again, giving them more money.

    • @wolfeman79
      @wolfeman79 Месяц назад +62

      Even today it doesn't matter if it's made in the USA the steel used is supplied from overseas.

    • @SDSWrath004
      @SDSWrath004 Месяц назад +15

      @wolfeman79 buying American means steel would be part of buy all American products.

    • @BlackHole171
      @BlackHole171 Месяц назад +15

      There should be a show like “Forged in Fire” but they make handcrafted tools (other than knives) instead and still test them to see which ones are functional and reliable.

    • @maxz69
      @maxz69 Месяц назад +5

      Where's my fkn comment? i swear i replied first. Pretty much the same thing as wolferam

  • @g0r3ify
    @g0r3ify Месяц назад +680

    Thank God for the disclaimer. I was just about to fire up my hydraulic press in my living room after seeing the thumbnail, but then the disclaimer saved me.

    • @JoeMama-q7v
      @JoeMama-q7v Месяц назад +11

      😂

    • @Shwisserland
      @Shwisserland Месяц назад +4

      lol

    • @wayne13man
      @wayne13man Месяц назад +5

      LMAO

    • @eduardoBR1991
      @eduardoBR1991 Месяц назад +12

      Man, I always say "If there's a sign, there's a story". You never know😂

    • @redjazzjrSRM
      @redjazzjrSRM Месяц назад

      If you have a hydraulic press then you are probably a grown man and know what you are doing. A child is improbable to have access to one. I on the other hand have lethal machinery that can saw your hand off so much worse or burn your hand faster than you can say 'supercalifragilisticexpealidocious'.
      I do have robots that like to steal your phones when you don't pay attention to make prank calls.

  • @nl3mk
    @nl3mk 27 дней назад +3

    It seems the old American hammer was made of cheap cast iron, with high hardness but might also high brittleness. The modern Chinese hammer is made of high quality steel which is lower in hardness, but less in brittleness.
    The high hardness usually has the trade off of a high brittleness, in iron-steel materials.
    The modern hand hammer has the hardness high enough for general usage with less chance to crack. It deformed at around 30 tons pressure, much higher than a person can provide, and well behaved by deformation without crack when the load was over 100 tons. This performance might be designed by modern standard for safety concerns.

    • @李争光-j1u
      @李争光-j1u 26 дней назад +1

      A professional review

    • @MichalKobuszewski
      @MichalKobuszewski 7 дней назад +1

      Thank you for your insight! The old hammer seemed to be made of somewhat ductile material as well - the deformation on the ends shows that it is not that prone to crack. I would love to see a 200x closeup on the steel grains!

  • @GoogleSpyZon
    @GoogleSpyZon Месяц назад +381

    That Hammer had seen some heavy usage for the ends to have mushroomed out. Definitely an heirloom tool worth saving.

    • @rcrawford42
      @rcrawford42 Месяц назад +41

      It would have been better served leaving it as-is and just replacing the handle. That wasn't rust, that was its history.

    • @CorrectsYou
      @CorrectsYou Месяц назад +55

      @@rcrawford42 Yeah no, this isn't a one of a kind painting meant to be observed in it's original form, it is a tool that deserves to be treated well and actually used instead of wasting away on some shelf in a hoarder house.

    • @Kaiserboo1871
      @Kaiserboo1871 Месяц назад +22

      @@CorrectsYou I agree with you.
      I’m of the belief that unless the object in question is one of a kind, then it should be used.
      Hammers like that, while old, are still just hammers and as such should be used as such.

    • @hindugoat2302
      @hindugoat2302 Месяц назад +12

      a softer metal passes more of the force to the target.
      A harder metal bounces back, wasting energy.
      They dont need to be good at resisting crush, that dosnt show quality.

    • @strawhousepig
      @strawhousepig Месяц назад +22

      @@hindugoat2302 Use of softer materials for hammering is based on application, not transfer of force which has diminishing returns.
      This demonstration would indicate to me durability or the lack of due to the newer one being poorly and quickly made. The older hammer is deformed as you can clearly see so it isn't harder than it needs to be, but it was made to last not just be cheap enough to be bought again and again. The newer one has so many pits I can't help but wonder if it's porous.

  • @coryminnick1256
    @coryminnick1256 2 месяца назад +1409

    I would restore that hammer too. That thing was a BEAST.

    • @Sherwoody
      @Sherwoody Месяц назад +32

      It looks like something Thor would carry.

    • @zarthemad8386
      @zarthemad8386 Месяц назад +14

      welding jacked up the heat treat

    • @jonathanshaw8868
      @jonathanshaw8868 Месяц назад +14

      ​@zarthemad8386 you would need to get that entire head to at least 500 degrees to effect the temper.

    • @Sherwoody
      @Sherwoody Месяц назад +6

      @@coryminnick1256 just a guess here, but the old hammer is probably a lower carbon steel making it less brittle. I seem to recall that a mint uses low carbon steel because it’s less brittle.

    • @stupadasol5911
      @stupadasol5911 Месяц назад +13

      All it really needed was a new handle.

  • @ronsereda4242
    @ronsereda4242 Месяц назад +74

    Im 76 yrs old I have my grandfather's 10 lb sledgehammer. Don't know what all else he used it for but he had only a wood furnace in his house and used the sledgehammer with a splitting wedge to split his firewood. Then my dad had it for years before it passed to me. I too had only wood heat so used the sledgehammer and grandfather's same splitting wedge. Several years ago I did have to replace the handle. Even though I kept the the head of the splitting wedge free of flared edges sadly it broke in half a few years ago. Can't imagine how many thousands of big hits it took.
    I also still use his two hand planes. One metal with a wooden handle one all wood, except of course the blade and blade clamp. I make big log benches and use the 100+ year old hand planes to shape and smoothen the surfaces. Both still have the original blades.

    • @tastx3142
      @tastx3142 Месяц назад +2

      I have inherited old tools and love their durability. My old tire iron that my great grandfather had made and welded decades ago was far superior than anything that was made more recently that often broke or bent when used. I was quite upset when my vehicle was stolen and never recovered and lost that superior piece of steel.

    • @samgilliland3423
      @samgilliland3423 Месяц назад

      Weld it

    • @bill45colt
      @bill45colt Месяц назад

      plane

    • @InoYamanaka-j3w
      @InoYamanaka-j3w Месяц назад

      I have two Soviet sledgehammers, I don't know how old they are, but they are definitely over 70. One is about the same size as the hammer in the video, the other is much bigger. But unfortunately, I don't think about restoring them.

  • @johnwillis4706
    @johnwillis4706 Месяц назад +605

    I have a 10-pound Plvme sledgehammer that belonged to my granddad. It has been used and abused since about 1920 and still has its original shape, handle and even some original paint. I refaced it some year ago to retore it's striking profile and it is still the best sledgehammer I own. I've made it my business to only buy and use American made tools. As granddad told me when I was about 10, "you can buy a good tool once or you can buy a cheap tool over and over. They are always worth the extra money". This old hammer is definitely worth restoring. 100 tons under a press and it didn't deform, that's American quality.

    • @RonLo
      @RonLo Месяц назад +38

      I use to buy cheap stuff not anymore. I've learned my lesson. Buy American support your neighbors in employment. Keep jobs in America. I've paid up to 7 times more in price.

    • @rickymartin4807
      @rickymartin4807 Месяц назад +35

      My favorite place to buy American made tools is at antique stores.

    • @TylerSnyder305
      @TylerSnyder305 Месяц назад +18

      PLOMB ( changed their name to PROTO in the 40's ) made great tools.
      Their hammers are not particularly common though because they had legal troubles and were forced to stop making them 2 different times.
      There was PLOMB who mostly made mechanics tools, and PLUMB who made axes and hammers going back to the 1870's.
      They sued because the name was so similar and the court ruled that PLOMB could keep their name as long as they stayed in their lane and stopped making hammers.
      That was around 1921 I believe, at some point they started making hammers again getting into more legal trouble and eventually decided to just change their name to PROTO.

    • @randyearles1634
      @randyearles1634 Месяц назад +1

      I agree!

    • @Gallery90
      @Gallery90 Месяц назад +19

      Better to spend a dime once, rather than a nickel four times.

  • @yomuno2511
    @yomuno2511 11 дней назад

    I purchased a small sledgehammer about 15 years ago at a thrift store. Made in Brazil. Wonderful product.

  • @PanamaSticks
    @PanamaSticks Месяц назад +603

    I don't think the Chinese hammer was forged. Just cast metal.

    • @Reaktanzkreis
      @Reaktanzkreis Месяц назад +19

      ..drop and forget..

    • @jamesrasp2713
      @jamesrasp2713 Месяц назад +58

      With a lot of inclusions in the cast. Probably not a solid piece of pot metal

    • @abrogard142
      @abrogard142 Месяц назад +37

      so it's not even matching like with like.

    • @absolutez3r019
      @absolutez3r019 Месяц назад +39

      ​@abrogard142 no. I'd much rather see a high-quality modern hammer than watch something we know will fail, fail

    • @Reaktanzkreis
      @Reaktanzkreis Месяц назад

      @@absolutez3r019 If you need a quality made hammer, go to an professional tool dealer were the craftsmen purchase their tools. It cost a little more than a super duper bargain hammer at Aldi´s for $2,99.
      I own an old sledgehammer it belongs to my grandfather, its made in abt 1910. Even the shaft were still original , made of oak.

  • @vladimirputindreadlockrast812
    @vladimirputindreadlockrast812 Месяц назад +1411

    I can hear Crocodile Dundee now, "That's not a sledge hammer...This...is a sledge hammer!"

    • @peterrisden1148
      @peterrisden1148 Месяц назад +37

      Would be pronounced "Slidge amma" in Austrailian

    • @ghar7566
      @ghar7566 Месяц назад +4

      Club hammer

    • @trueaussie9230
      @trueaussie9230 Месяц назад +8

      @@peterrisden1148
      That's more likely Kiwi.
      Aussies would call it either a 'sledgy' or a 'FBH'.

    • @HLStrickland
      @HLStrickland Месяц назад +3

      😂😂 I even read that in his voice.

    • @iankearns774
      @iankearns774 Месяц назад +1

      @@peterrisden1148 No, I am an Aussie and it sounded nothing like that.

  • @JViello
    @JViello Месяц назад +226

    I want to comment on the transformation. Nice rescue! Makes me think differently now when I see old tools sitting in the corner of an old barn or garage. That is truly an example of a "buy it once" tool.

    • @Lambda_Ovine
      @Lambda_Ovine Месяц назад

      probably why they stopped making them like that. because they realized that people stopped buying them

    • @frankyan9189
      @frankyan9189 Месяц назад

      @@Lambda_Ovine It's totally unnecessary too. We as humans can exert maybe 1 ton of force maximum. considering the fatigue limit, 20 tons in strength is enough. And the cheap Chinese sledgehammer went above 30 tons.

    • @WalterWhite0Dirony
      @WalterWhite0Dirony 10 дней назад

      Yeah but this is the walmart model of commerce...offer the absolute cheapest damm thing possible and dumb Americans will flock to buy it. Europeans typically buy fewer things but quality that will last. Americans buy cheap, throw-away stuff. Lately I've had so many "made in china" products that die as soon as the warranty is up its killing me in repairs. My old, old, old stuff not made in China just keeps chugging along. But I'm sure the team of trump/Elon will fix all this 😂😂😂

  • @FilmishTheNerdSlayer2000
    @FilmishTheNerdSlayer2000 День назад

    Man this is awesome work. Am I the only one who wishes he has incorporated a small piece of the original wooden handle into the new handle as like a decorative element? Would have been cool to keep those two materials together but great work regardless.

  • @alaakela
    @alaakela Месяц назад +959

    Does the USA still make hammers? If so, test an American hammer from 2024 vs a Chinese from a 100 years ago.

    • @StylesEste
      @StylesEste Месяц назад +73

      Actually we do. Supposedly Warwood Tools makes some premium worktools.

    • @ronaldbrown8792
      @ronaldbrown8792 Месяц назад +148

      Also do a test of a Chinese 2024 hammer vs an 100-year old Chinese hammer.

    • @Ozarkmadness56
      @Ozarkmadness56 Месяц назад +34

      ….The cheapest US made sledge hammer

    • @endrizo
      @endrizo Месяц назад +6

      fair enough

    • @togasso
      @togasso Месяц назад +36

      In Cina 100 anni fa vivevano con una ciotola di riso al giorno. I martelli se li sarebbero mangiati

  • @В.В.Д
    @В.В.Д Месяц назад +220

    So cute... It seems to me that the sledgehammer even cried with happiness .. Thank you for restoring this good tool!!!

    • @chavitacanta008
      @chavitacanta008 Месяц назад +6

      It was not crying ! It was laughing at the sucker who bought the Chinese sledge ! 😂😂

    • @Alchahol
      @Alchahol Месяц назад

      🙄

  • @janetyeoman1544
    @janetyeoman1544 Месяц назад +413

    Considering the flaring on the older sledgehammer, the guys using years ago must have been pretty tough. Even the 100 ton press didn’t affect it.

    • @t16205
      @t16205 Месяц назад +58

      My thoughts exactly! Someone knew that hammer at a personal level

    • @daintree98
      @daintree98 Месяц назад +15

      The guy was working on the Chain Gang breaking rocks.

    • @Omega34736
      @Omega34736 Месяц назад +26

      A million hits will do that

    • @MrLoserpatrol
      @MrLoserpatrol Месяц назад +37

      They start out soft. The more you use them the harder they become. When you hear the term hardened steel it means it has been hammered to make it more durable. You are compressing the molecules that form the metal making it denser.

    • @trueaussie9230
      @trueaussie9230 Месяц назад +55

      ​@@MrLoserpatrol
      WRONG.
      'Hardening' steel is a process of heating it (to around 800-900C), holding it at that temp then quickly quenching (cooling) it in oil or water.

  • @lizardfirefighter110
    @lizardfirefighter110 4 дня назад

    I am sure that we all appreciated your restoration, but it is cute to see that your cat seemed to also….
    Great video 👍

  • @fatmuscle1
    @fatmuscle1 2 месяца назад +560

    Thank you so much for restoring that hammer. Beautiful.

    • @katieandkevinsears7724
      @katieandkevinsears7724 Месяц назад +22

      It didn't need restored. It only needed a new handle to go smash things for the next 125 years.

    • @robinblackmoor8732
      @robinblackmoor8732 Месяц назад +7

      Shame that it was allowed to get in that condition. I have had my sledge hammer for over 40 years. It does not look like that. Tools do not have to that condition, if you care for them, and store them properly. None of my tools are rusty.

    • @JamesJames-li2wv
      @JamesJames-li2wv Месяц назад +1

      @@katieandkevinsears7724 well you can't put lipstick on a pig without stretching her out a little.

    • @RiverRat1953
      @RiverRat1953 Месяц назад +9

      It is sad to say that the grinder used was probably made in China

    • @ForestFolf
      @ForestFolf Месяц назад

      Really hard to find USA made stuff anymore.... ​@@RiverRat1953

  • @dentalnovember
    @dentalnovember Месяц назад +641

    Great job restoring this piece of American industrial might. Cat approved!

    • @djham2916
      @djham2916 Месяц назад +7

      I think you removed too much material. All that patina and history is now gone 😢

    • @GoofySlugpup
      @GoofySlugpup Месяц назад +2

      ​@@djham2916🦌

    • @scottkessler9881
      @scottkessler9881 Месяц назад +2

      Great restoration job! 💪⚒👍

    • @karlelderich7502
      @karlelderich7502 Месяц назад +1

      American industry dead and Cat is good for eat now.

    • @uncleho1945
      @uncleho1945 Месяц назад

      Yet Americans can't produce anything anymore, haha

  • @bigscrewg
    @bigscrewg Месяц назад +113

    It took 100 tons of pressure like it was nothing. This thing has earned its right to be restored

  • @juanfernandovalenzuela9919
    @juanfernandovalenzuela9919 12 дней назад

    What a genius! Now you have a hammer for the next 1000 years. I could add a concept and that is that this hammer, after being subjected to 100 tons of internal stress, almost certainly received microfractures… even so, it looks intact. Congratulations.

  • @uber_nerd-l7r
    @uber_nerd-l7r Месяц назад +150

    7:17 that Hydraulic press really just went "you have proven yourself, now, I shall lend you my aid"

  • @judih.8754
    @judih.8754 Месяц назад +403

    That refinished head is a piece of art. Beautiful.

    • @doughboysnerdly2745
      @doughboysnerdly2745 Месяц назад +7

      thats what she said

    • @sheilaolfieway1885
      @sheilaolfieway1885 Месяц назад

      probably can't do that to the one made of potmetal from china while the american one will last for 100 years or more

    • @gr8dvd
      @gr8dvd Месяц назад +2

      @@doughboysnerdly2745 I’d think she’d prefer UNfinished. Me too, tho 2b clear in my case vintage, ‘rusty gold’ tools only 😀

    • @73Datsun180B
      @73Datsun180B Месяц назад +2

      looked like he put the handle on the wrong side lol

  • @camrobinson1466
    @camrobinson1466 Месяц назад +56

    I never thought I myself, “I want to see a video of a new vs old sledgehammer test. And after that test I want to see that old hammer brought back to its glory”. And I really never thought I’d see myself saying I want one even though I have no use for it. Good video. RUclips knows what I need to see even when I don’t know.

  • @NghiaNguyen-qq7yx
    @NghiaNguyen-qq7yx 9 дней назад +22

    Thank you for Restoring that master piece.

  • @DMBLaan
    @DMBLaan Месяц назад +305

    So freaking satisfying to see them restore the old hammer! I was literally thinking how cool I'd be to do that, and then they did!

    • @Aquaboy666
      @Aquaboy666 Месяц назад +1

      @@DMBLaan yeah

    • @davidhick4303
      @davidhick4303 Месяц назад

      I wish he didn’t weld on it though… hardened tool steel doesn’t like that.

    • @blaply3421
      @blaply3421 Месяц назад +1

      Who are they? I saw him working alone on it. Did I miss something?

  • @joeyrakas8364
    @joeyrakas8364 Месяц назад +61

    Wow, and it got the treatment it deserved. The restoration was so awesome!

  • @joesmoe6947
    @joesmoe6947 Месяц назад +865

    Plot twist: the hydraulic press was made in china.

  • @davidhenningson4782
    @davidhenningson4782 16 дней назад +2

    SOLD...next sledgehammer I need... will go find an old one with a broken handle out in a field or something... then refurbish it myself! 😊

  • @Trebuchet48
    @Trebuchet48 Месяц назад +81

    Sorry for the downer comment, but: That was an excessive level of restoration. Sure, clean it up a bit, remove the curled over edges, and of course a new handle. But you've gone and removed all the character it's developed in its 100 years. The beauty. The patina.
    And by welding the pits, you've most likely weakened it significantly. It'll be a high carbon steel, which doesn't take kindly to welding except with very special processes and is now likely to initiate cracking.
    I've got an old one like that in my garage, BTW.

    • @michaelburbank2276
      @michaelburbank2276 Месяц назад +8

      Blah blah

    • @MikeInExile
      @MikeInExile Месяц назад +32

      @@michaelburbank2276 Yeah, it sucks when someone knows what they're talking about doesn't it? ;-)

    • @pimpompoom93726
      @pimpompoom93726 Месяц назад +14

      Very doubtful that head is 'high carbon steel'. This is not a ball peen hammer, toughness is far more important than hardness for a sledge. It's probably .4-.5 carbon max and the welding spot was only mass quenched, not quenched with water or anything like that. No martensite formed, not brittle. But if you're concerned, you can always run a torch over it after welding to stress relieve it, or preheat it prior to welding to prolong the cooldown interval.

    • @MikeInExile
      @MikeInExile Месяц назад +5

      @@pimpompoom93726 >>>> "Very doubtful that head is 'high carbon steel'."
      Yeah I don't know man. I'm pretty sure most, if not all, sledge hammers are forgings made from 4000 series steel which implies a high carbon steel. But, it did come from China, so without actually testing it, who _knows_ what they actually used. ;-)

    • @pimpompoom93726
      @pimpompoom93726 Месяц назад +3

      @@MikeInExile 'AISI 4000 Series Steel; Ferrous Metal; Low Alloy Steel; Medium Carbon Steel' from ASM. They note .28-.33 on the carbon which is even lower than I suspected, but they do have high Chrome and relatively high Moly and Manganese. It seems they are looking for toughness, not hardness with that carbon level and alloying levels? I worked in Heat Treat many decades ago, we used to consider anything .7 and above as 'high carbon'.

  • @psychocuda
    @psychocuda Месяц назад +1588

    New Chinese hammer: "Stop, please make it stop!" American vintage hammer: "Heh, that tickled."

    • @SinfullyHera
      @SinfullyHera Месяц назад +62

      If only modern America was as good, really fell off

    • @slothymango
      @slothymango Месяц назад

      ​@@SinfullyHerathe founding stock of America should be the only people with political rights. Everyone else should be low wage peasants.

    • @mrz80
      @mrz80 Месяц назад +24

      Looked like the old American hammer actually left a very shallow divot in the bottom plate of the press?

    • @supremegreaser2399
      @supremegreaser2399 Месяц назад +31

      Well, most modern American hammers are made the same way Chinese hammers are made. I see this is a case of forged steel versus cast steel. There are many videos showing old European made tools outperform modern American ones.
      There are good tools being made today, but it's fun to pick a cheap one for a YT video.

    • @SejoMinoXP
      @SejoMinoXP Месяц назад

      ​@@supremegreaser2399 A lot of Chinese steel refineries have closed down recently. The metal is very cheaply made and bends super easy. A lot of homes they reinforced with the metal are also falling apart.

  • @paulmccormick9009
    @paulmccormick9009 Месяц назад +36

    The Chinese one is all primed up now, got all the air out of it .😂 now it should work fine lol.

  • @ole-mariusbergesen7818
    @ole-mariusbergesen7818 12 дней назад +1

    To be fair a used hammer will get harder by usage a brand new will be softer repetitive striking will pack the molecules, its the same with rock drills,they are way stronger after several 1000 meters than new.

  • @eternalgreenknight
    @eternalgreenknight Месяц назад +49

    As a novice blacksmith, my favorite hammers are the old ones I’ve snagged from antique stores. I wouldn’t grind and polish one unless it’s really deformed, but I’ve had to put new handles on a couple… old American tools were built to last. Hopefully again someday. Lots of Chinese stuff IS useful and affordable, and I’m thankful for the availability, but the quality of the antique American stuff was amazing.

    • @CodeguruX
      @CodeguruX Месяц назад +2

      Partially because they're not being used for anything that matters, like building a railway system across the country. This is like comparing a decorative weapon to one used to kill people. Either it works, or it doesn't. And the "doesn't" category is not an option since that means your project, your factory that made it, or YOU cease to exist.

    • @Vespyr_
      @Vespyr_ Месяц назад +4

      ​@@CodeguruX I mean love, let's be real here, Chinese tools have built high speed rail, roads, and robotics all over the world

    • @jasonjason5325
      @jasonjason5325 Месяц назад

      ​@@Vespyr_ um ok brahhhhhh

    • @frankyan9189
      @frankyan9189 Месяц назад +1

      The reason we study materials science is to figure out what is enough so that we can make it enough without over-specifying to be safe. So this argument is kind of dumb. A hand tool never needs to withstand 100 tons of force. We as humans can't exert anything over 1 ton. From the metal fatigue standpoint, you only need the strength to be 20x of the maximum cyclic load. In this case, 20 tons is sufficient for its purpose

    • @eternalgreenknight
      @eternalgreenknight Месяц назад

      @@frankyan9189what argument did I make?

  • @nickhaynie5980
    @nickhaynie5980 Месяц назад +61

    Hooray! Let's hear it for the old boys! Shout out to our steel cities Bethlehem, Pittsburg, Birmingham, Cleveland,Toledo, Buffalo, Detroit, Gary, USA

    • @blaynegreiner9365
      @blaynegreiner9365 Месяц назад +1

      My dad used to work for Bethlehem Steel way back in the day.

    • @ChicagoAirportSpotter
      @ChicagoAirportSpotter Месяц назад +1

      Chicago had plenty of foundries along the lake and the river back in the day as well.

    • @CallMeInfinite0000
      @CallMeInfinite0000 Месяц назад

      We have an H now lol

  • @SpankyK
    @SpankyK Месяц назад +86

    2:57 plastic deformation

    • @corydunaway
      @corydunaway Месяц назад +10

      That's paint...

    • @Scudzzorz15
      @Scudzzorz15 Месяц назад +4

      It's definitely paint on the outside of the hammer, dude.

    • @SpankyK
      @SpankyK Месяц назад +21

      Plastic deformation is when a material's shape or size permanently changes due to an applied force, such as bending, compression, torsion, or tensile stress. The deformation remains even after the force is removed.

    • @SpankyK
      @SpankyK Месяц назад +4

      @@corydunaway I see the paint, I'm not talking about it.

    • @Fx_Explains
      @Fx_Explains Месяц назад +3

      ​@corydunaway Shut up when Engineers are talking!

  • @lewisbeard4846
    @lewisbeard4846 4 дня назад

    Came to see the old stuff survive the crush, unexpectedly and extremely pleased to see the old girl restored to glory.

  • @edsanders9773
    @edsanders9773 Месяц назад +403

    Thor wants his hammer back.

    • @pimpompoom93726
      @pimpompoom93726 Месяц назад +3

      The Chinese one looked like Thor's short hammer after it was pressed! LOL

    • @TheNameOfJesus
      @TheNameOfJesus Месяц назад

      Adamericanium.

    • @ruuper
      @ruuper Месяц назад +1

      Thorsen hammer is norwegian

    • @lionhead123
      @lionhead123 Месяц назад +1

      Mjolnir wouldn't stand a chance againts that one.

    • @gurra63able
      @gurra63able Месяц назад +1

      That's not Tors hammer he used a sledgehammer from Hultafors-Bruk/mill.

  • @bjiggles8145
    @bjiggles8145 Месяц назад +7

    First half went about as expected. The second half truly warmed my soul. Thank you for giving that poor old thing the love it deserved.

  • @bartonstink
    @bartonstink Месяц назад +37

    A more equivalent comparison would be comparing the 100 year old American made hammer to a present day American made hammer. I’m guessing it looks very similar to the Chinese one in this video. Steel is recycled so much these days that pretty much any products of the same category are not gonna be as strong as it was when made 100 years ago. Also, do the same thing with the Chinese product. If you can get your hands on a 100 year old sledge hammer.

    • @Jon-O.
      @Jon-O. Месяц назад

      Can pretty much guarantee the Chinese was casted and the American was forged.

    • @vanc3dummy804
      @vanc3dummy804 Месяц назад +14

      i dont think its a matter of alloying and more of matter of heat treatment of the steel. Modern hammer maker dont have any economic incentive to go extra mile with heat treatment cause it added cost. For manufacturer a hammer that can withstand 40 ton is good enough for human use

    • @chelsea7xhf
      @chelsea7xhf Месяц назад +5

      Sadly there is no more 100% American made hammer these days

  • @brett6239
    @brett6239 24 дня назад

    When I was a kid I found an old axe head around a 200 year old house with a metal detector. Put in on a normal axe handle. Worked fantastic. Didn't bother to even clean it up.

  • @Grasses0n
    @Grasses0n Месяц назад +25

    Wasnt expecting the bonus footage of the old sledgehammer being restored. That was nice.

  • @MissCase530
    @MissCase530 Месяц назад +23

    It is almost a sacred task to take a properly forged steel tool and give it a new life instead of tossing it onto the scrap heap. More people should be hunting out and preserving these amazing artifacts from a time that people made good things and were proud of them.

    • @snaplemouton
      @snaplemouton Месяц назад

      Or you know... Just make good tools again instead of exporting the manufacturing to the cheapest country.

    • @davidhick4303
      @davidhick4303 Месяц назад

      Too bad he welded on that beautiful old hardened steel…

  • @VincentPeer
    @VincentPeer Месяц назад +53

    Wow. Keep it taken care of and I’ll bet that’d last literally thousands of years.

  • @Caindodeparaquedass
    @Caindodeparaquedass 14 дней назад +1

    Marreta antiga, tá parecendo logotipo da Chevrolet 👍.

  • @mebymyself2816
    @mebymyself2816 Месяц назад +163

    That a sledge hammer to be proud of, even gets approval after a cat scan,

  • @cdpond
    @cdpond Месяц назад +38

    Great job. And to wrap it up, I'd consider spiking in a few steel wedges on the top side of the handle to properly set the handle securely into the sledge head. Yes, I know you used the hydraulic press to jam the handle in, but wedges are how you expand the tip of the handle so that should the wood dry and shrink a bit, that the handle is still securely mounted in the sledge head. But regardless, great job on restoring that sledgehammer. Looks wonderful!

    • @thehoneybadger8089
      @thehoneybadger8089 Месяц назад +10

      What you describe is for ax, hatchet, or small hammers handles because they are inserted in the opposite direction. Hoe, pick, and sledge handles do not require wedging.

    • @N4CR
      @N4CR Месяц назад +1

      @@thehoneybadger8089 Some do eventually. I use aluminium wedges on the sides instead of splitting/weakening the handle.

    • @73Datsun180B
      @73Datsun180B Месяц назад

      @@thehoneybadger8089 all my vintage sledgehammers have factory wedges in them, I just did a new handle on one a couple of days ago for my nephew to use on the farm he is working on

    • @phil3332
      @phil3332 Месяц назад +1

      Hello from the UK....l was wondering the same thing and yours is the first comment to say it. And l find that the handle of today do not last long either. l have a small lump hammer l bought a new handle,fitted it, used it a couple of time and it broke and split down the middle.

    • @muleb384
      @muleb384 Месяц назад

      @@thehoneybadger8089 I was wondering that as I watched.... I've never redone the handle on a sledge but I figured it was the same process as an axe handle and this guy in the video didn't do it "proper".

  • @jhondoe3213
    @jhondoe3213 2 месяца назад +58

    You'd be surprised how well sturdy vintage tools and machines are usually rough cosmetically but usually will still operate

  • @enrique13669
    @enrique13669 6 дней назад

    Fantastic! Thor would truly be proud to wield that hammer. Good comparison and better restoration.

  • @DocRiedenschneider
    @DocRiedenschneider Месяц назад +55

    Thank you for the care you put in on this wonderful restoration of a piece of our industrial history.I see your little pal approved as well!

  • @tom.coomes
    @tom.coomes Месяц назад +18

    I can respect that! Love seeing something old restored to new life instead of just being tossed out.

  • @Ameliafromhere
    @Ameliafromhere 2 месяца назад +1080

    Was watching this with my son and I said “look, 100 tons and it didnt flinch” He said “Thats because it was made out of freedom.” 😂 ❤ 🇺🇸

    • @lambdaprog
      @lambdaprog 2 месяца назад

      A guaranteed successful career in the deep state.

    • @Skipper.17
      @Skipper.17 Месяц назад +87

      Indoctrinated much

    • @JamesJames-li2wv
      @JamesJames-li2wv Месяц назад +37

      Weird i was just watching this with my dad *the president* an he said the same thing! before he pooped himself

    • @kwslife116
      @kwslife116 Месяц назад

      Tells me everything about you. ​@Skipper.17

    • @Naptosis
      @Naptosis Месяц назад +5

      @@JamesJames-li2wv That's okay, the last couple wear diapers.

  • @michaelnguyen823
    @michaelnguyen823 9 дней назад

    I wish we knew who manufactured that sledgehammer. Their name deserved to live on forever.

  • @daveball314
    @daveball314 2 месяца назад +248

    I also would have had to clean that up after seeing it take 100 tons. It would probably be my favourite hammer.

    • @GardenGuy1942
      @GardenGuy1942 Месяц назад

      It’s just metal, it should be recycled. You must love global warming.

    • @daveball314
      @daveball314 Месяц назад +41

      @@GardenGuy1942 Please explain how cleaning it up and using it is not recycling it. You must love straw men.

    • @Roger-go6jc
      @Roger-go6jc Месяц назад +21

      @@GardenGuy1942 It was recycled. Restored for another 100 years. The Chinese one should be melted down though.

    • @bloodleader5
      @bloodleader5 Месяц назад +23

      ​@@GardenGuy194260 IQ.

    • @cavalieroutdoors6036
      @cavalieroutdoors6036 Месяц назад

      @@GardenGuy1942 You realize in order to recycle metal you have to heat it and expend carbon - and a lot of it - into the atmosphere right? Sanding it down and adding a new handle is the lowest emission way to recycle that hammer possible. If anyone here loves Global warming it'd be you.

  • @BavarianBarbarian69
    @BavarianBarbarian69 Месяц назад +71

    0:38 thanks for hitting them together, i needet that 😂👍

  • @corneliuswowbagger
    @corneliuswowbagger Месяц назад +303

    Fine Chinese workmanship at it’s finest! Is it any wonder the Three Gorges Dam is slowly failing? I am from the upper Ohio Valley below Pittsburgh and when those mills were in operation it was glorious to drive from Steubenville, OH to Wheeling, West Virginia at night. Better than a fireworks display and making real steel!

    • @Rednickincell
      @Rednickincell Месяц назад +24

      Last few polls I have seen…. over 80% of Americans won’t pay more than 10% for American made vs. imported
      What most people don’t get?
      Is it is mostly US multinationals making the lion share of those profits inflating the trade deficit between China to the USA
      Where Chinese companies mostly trade with their Belt and Road country partners these days
      These US multinationals are the ones sending you that junk
      These US multinationals are still using the same highly polluting labour intensive factories formula.
      As they were using more and more illegal labour, smuggled in from South East Asia in their wholly owned factories in China
      Or more and more automation in their wholly owned factories in China these days
      These are the same companies who got those trump Corporate tax cuts you for sure cheered about
      Same companies based in China who derived 392 billion in sales of their goods and services into those Chinese domestic markets in 2018 when trump started his trade war
      Same companies averaging 20% to 40% of their earnings from China whose high flying stocks are in your 401k/Pensions
      Same companies who the American farmer and consumer were sacrificed. So the USA could try and get “more” or “better” access for the US multinationals, into those Chinese Domestic markets during the trade war
      Same companies whose HQ is in a North American city you can easily go stand outside and protest at….
      Why didn’t China pull the nuclear trade option and boot these US companies you might ask?
      For one, it would crash the US Economy
      And the Chinese don’t believe in a zero-sum game type of thinking
      As I can show you during the trade war.
      China didn’t pull out their big trade weapons, in fact they were lowering tariffs to most countries not raising them
      👇
      Trump’s ‘trade war’ with China won’t be so easy to win
      Having learned these value chain lessons, Beijing has worked hard to bring more of the high-value-adding parts of value chains into China, and to build hi-tech industries in which it can establish a globally competitive position.
      China has successfully done this in areas like high-speed trains (CRRC), digital telecoms networks (Huawei), drones (DJI) and hi-tech batteries (BYD).
      Trump’s team is not wrong to be worried about China’s competitive emergence here, and to target these new-tech sectors in the latest trade war sortie.
      But here’s the problem: China exports almost none of these new-tech products to the US, making US tariff threats meaningless. Rather, they go to developing economy markets - many embraced by the Belt and Road initiative - where China has succeeded in building a hi-tech, high-value brand reputation.
      As Trump’s team will quickly learn, the challenge of finding China’s pain points is bigger than expected: for a decade China’s priority has been to base growth on the domestic consumer economy and reduce reliance on the low-value-adding export processing industries (many of which are US- or Hong Kong-owned and concentrated in the Pearl River Delta)
      SCMP

    • @spitfirenutspitfirenut4835
      @spitfirenutspitfirenut4835 Месяц назад +8

      My Chinese chopsticks broke eating rice.

    • @Rednickincell
      @Rednickincell Месяц назад

      @@spitfirenutspitfirenut4835
      That’s because you have been cheeeep basturds in the past
      Now in 2024 you say you want to pay 30% or 40% more for the sheet you buy
      Yeah right
      👇
      Americans want U.S. goods, but not willing to pay more: Reuters/Ipsos poll
      A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday found 70 percent of Americans think it is “very important” or “somewhat important” to buy U.S.-made products.
      Despite that sentiment, 37 percent said they would refuse to pay more for U.S.-made goods versus imports. Twenty six percent said they would only pay up to 5 percent more to buy American, and 21 percent capped the premium at 10 percent.
      Reuters

    • @richardthomas5362
      @richardthomas5362 Месяц назад

      @@Rednickincell Yeah, I know, Heil Chairman Xi, emperor of China.

    • @Internal_Sight
      @Internal_Sight Месяц назад +25

      There’re are no prove that the dam is failing lol. Not in the slightest even in the most brutal conditions of its location. Now, let’s talk about the fine American made marvels: Boeing! Crashing one plane at a time 😂, DR Horton and many other fine American home builders: build like American sloppy joes, falls apart like a Lego set 😂, Ford, GM, Dodge! Consistently rank at the bottom of the list as most unreliable automobiles 😂, American roads and bridges? Falling apart like a Lego set 😂😂

  • @JonnyR1981
    @JonnyR1981 7 дней назад

    I love the restoration of the old quality hammer.

  • @draconis17
    @draconis17 Месяц назад +91

    To be fair, he showed at the beginning that the chinese one was still perfectly capable of breaking rocks and stuff. I'd like to know the weights of both hammers, since there's a pretty good chance that the modern one is made purposefully less dense so that it's lighter and less tiring to swing. That would make it more actually useful as long as you don't swing it with more than, yknow, 30 tons of force or so

    • @carlosc.4955
      @carlosc.4955 Месяц назад +12

      you can also observe the chinese one is not flat on the sides which would be more efficient to break even surfaces or objects but not to stand this kind of pressure since it would focus all the pressure in a single point instead of distributing the weight throught the whole body.

    • @jro2020
      @jro2020 Месяц назад +6

      I'm curious as to how the Chinese Hammer would perform after performing several million hits and being work hardened like the used Hammer, we can clearly see it deformed over time in the beginning

    • @bert3241
      @bert3241 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@jro2020I've never heard of "work hardening" just imagine the chinesium hammer being deformed 10 times worse

    • @jro2020
      @jro2020 Месяц назад +7

      @@bert3241 so you admit that you're unqualified to answer the question but you want to put your two cents in anyway. Interesting.

    • @shiroshnur
      @shiroshnur Месяц назад

      ​@@bert3241Google work hardening in metallurgy.

  • @oogdiver
    @oogdiver Месяц назад +23

    Different steel composition, different hardening/tempering process.
    Both hammers are designed and manufactured to break things with. Do they do that? Yes. As a manual tool are they ever going to be subjected to the compression forces used in this test? No.
    A Fiat will take you to the same places as a Ferrari. A Rolex does the same job as a Timex. There are occasions though that having the Ferrari and the Rolex will be a better fit but busting concrete doesn't need a super-duper hammer. Frankly, I'd be more concerned about the quality and fit of the handle if I was going to work with one all day.

    • @ambienceization
      @ambienceization Месяц назад

      ooooooo a triggered chinesium

    • @DJZarpRix
      @DJZarpRix Месяц назад +4

      Most correct, and least racist comment.

    • @schnips9142
      @schnips9142 Месяц назад +6

      Sad having to scroll so far to read some common sense.

    • @barney2633
      @barney2633 Месяц назад

      Correct. Also, in my opinion, the handle was not well fitted .

    • @burneraccount706
      @burneraccount706 Месяц назад

      ive bought chinese knives that were heat treated and made from better steel than overpriced american knives. it really has nothing to do with the country of origin. it's just racism

  • @azfirewiseify
    @azfirewiseify Месяц назад +52

    Married a woman from Peru. Her sisters husband, “my new brother in law” asked me, why would we sell our steel company, U.S. makes the best steel in the world? I didn’t have an hr to explain

    • @anonanon7235
      @anonanon7235 Месяц назад +4

      German and Japanese steel is better.

    • @carloko08
      @carloko08 Месяц назад +3

      hahaha, german steel, english steel, spanish steel just in Europe, japanese steel too, c mon, dude, dont be naive, your "new brother in law" just want to be kind with you XD

    • @jcharlespotter2962
      @jcharlespotter2962 Месяц назад +1

      Sweet!

    • @davidd.1319
      @davidd.1319 Месяц назад

      @@anonanon7235 they will make you what you ask for but it will cost you.

    • @CS58420
      @CS58420 Месяц назад +5

      Swedish steel historically has been made from Norway iron which is the purest iron ore on the planet. Many countries mentioned in above comments all make excellent steel including the USA. Canada and Poland are also worthy steel producers but Sweden takes the prize.

  • @MissesWitch
    @MissesWitch 9 дней назад

    what a beautiful way you restored the hammer, looked soo good even your cute cat had to come and take a look! ♥
    I wish you also refined the inside too, and maybe more reliably fused it with the wood!

  • @dontwanta
    @dontwanta Месяц назад +24

    Perfect example of the saying "They don't make them like they used to"!!

    • @Chillinn33
      @Chillinn33 Месяц назад

      Its more like "they took our jobs"

    • @wesnohathas1993
      @wesnohathas1993 Месяц назад

      Enshittening on full display

  • @dragonknight1599
    @dragonknight1599 Месяц назад +88

    3:18 so THATS where Mjolnir was hiding!

  • @simon-oy6um
    @simon-oy6um Месяц назад +49

    The american hammer is not only better but has been work hardened over the years 😊

    • @judih.8754
      @judih.8754 Месяц назад +1

      That was exactly my thought.

    • @TylerSnyder305
      @TylerSnyder305 Месяц назад +3

      @@simon-oy6um it's not an American made hammer, it's a European pattern with a slip fit eye.

    • @HidaAtarasi
      @HidaAtarasi Месяц назад +4

      The new one hasn’t been tempered from decades and generations of use.
      It probably still wouldn’t compare, but an advantage is an advantage.

    • @raychilcote5558
      @raychilcote5558 Месяц назад +1

      Metallurgy. A science/engineering thing. Literally, American metal (more specifically, our ore and processing) is better.

    • @TylerSnyder305
      @TylerSnyder305 Месяц назад +1

      @@raychilcote5558
      But this hamer isn't American.

  • @irvanrusadi2867
    @irvanrusadi2867 Месяц назад +1

    The quality of objects and people in the past was indeed the best 😮

  • @ShadowsOnTheScreen
    @ShadowsOnTheScreen Месяц назад +82

    It looks great, but that hammer just needed a new handle and to be put back to work. The age was what made it look so awesome.

    • @Lordlovaduck
      @Lordlovaduck Месяц назад +7

      Absolutely. It's history was erased. 😢

    • @CanadianBadBoy
      @CanadianBadBoy Месяц назад +9

      @@Lordlovaduck Not to mention putting a weld on it actually takes some of the hardness out of it.

    • @Rcdoski
      @Rcdoski Месяц назад +7

      Exactly! It's a sledgehammer not a piece of jewelry.

    • @AtlasAS7D
      @AtlasAS7D Месяц назад +3

      Agreed, the patina is what gave it character.

    • @andy4829
      @andy4829 Месяц назад +1

      I disagree. Hammer is new now .

  • @davidparkinson188
    @davidparkinson188 2 месяца назад +109

    When it was brand new the American hammer would have been a very expensive purchase for a working craftsman, whereas the Chinese hammer today is absolutely dirt cheap for a working craftsman to the point it’s probably considered disposable. And that shows under the press obviously.
    If you ask the Chinese to make you a very cheap hammer they will.
    If you ask them to make a very expensive hammer they will.

    • @katieandkevinsears7724
      @katieandkevinsears7724 Месяц назад +40

      No...the Chinese will just charge you more for the expensive hammer.

    • @pogpogqwerty9950
      @pogpogqwerty9950 Месяц назад +20

      ​@@katieandkevinsears7724 yup your right, same hammer but they just change the logo with an american brand or german. Then sell it more expensive to you..

    • @JELWwL6unE8V7iGB3
      @JELWwL6unE8V7iGB3 Месяц назад

      ​@@katieandkevinsears7724 If you specify the alloy, write into the contract that payment is subject to the product passing quality control tests, and then demonstrate that you'll be competently performing those tests, they will build to spec. If you say you're giving them the money but not doing any verification then they might well do whatever is cheapest for them and take your money - kind of like how wall street sold subprime mortgages to foreign investors.

    • @Fire_I_
      @Fire_I_ Месяц назад

      Such Sinophobes some humans are, so boring in the world

    • @Fire_I_
      @Fire_I_ Месяц назад +4

      @@pogpogqwerty9950 Don't know if this guy is the one who also compares the titanium bolts from Aliexpress with the ones NASA uses on their space shuttles, under hydraulic pressure. But, look it up, you would be surprised who nails the last bolt there.

  • @stuartfitch7093
    @stuartfitch7093 Месяц назад +44

    As someone who has worked almost 20 years in the quality control department at a steelworks testing steel samples for quality on a daily basis, I could straight away visually see with my trained eye in the first few seconds of the video, the fissures (cracking) in the head of the Chinese made hammer. They have used very low quality steel to make the hammer, which makes it very brittle.

    • @admiraljosh
      @admiraljosh Месяц назад +2

      Brittle? Did you watch the video?

    • @donalddrane2795
      @donalddrane2795 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@admiraljosh yes, and the only cracking I saw, was the paint.

    • @AdamRud47
      @AdamRud47 Месяц назад +4

      If it was brittle, it would have shattered.
      The Chinese hammer was soft as butter lol

    • @ChildofGod1239
      @ChildofGod1239 Месяц назад +1

      It was the black paint that cracked

    • @steamdeck_guy
      @steamdeck_guy Месяц назад +4

      Visually see with your eyes? How else do you see and what else would you use?

  • @ryancheek7612
    @ryancheek7612 5 дней назад

    It's because the American one is made of real steel made from iron ore. The Chinese one is made from a 1986 Buick Regal that they got during cash for clunkers

  • @Leonard-cx2zi
    @Leonard-cx2zi Месяц назад +60

    Planned obsolescence. I’ll bet if you tested a new sledgehammer made in the USA, you’d get the same results as the Chinese one.

    • @carlosdgutierrez6570
      @carlosdgutierrez6570 Месяц назад +5

      Over engineering products to be 5 timea as strong as needed is a waste of money, energy and time.

    • @huntermccoy7641
      @huntermccoy7641 Месяц назад

      Making more junk for junk sake. Gotta love engineer's now

    • @carlosdgutierrez6570
      @carlosdgutierrez6570 Месяц назад +5

      @@huntermccoy7641 tools have only to last as much as the typical depreciation period that the accountants have decided is good enough, 3-5 years, anything else is a bonus.
      And the bean counters are the ones who actually call the shots in any successful company, not the engineering team.

    • @christianboehlefeld5168
      @christianboehlefeld5168 Месяц назад +3

      @@carlosdgutierrez6570 That really depends on the product. It may be for a simple sledgehammer, for a bridge or a building it isn't.
      Go to any history of The Golden Gate Bridge and you will see that they expected a level of traffic on the bridge that would see two car lengths between vehicles traveling a around 50 mph. Obviously; the bridge sees far more traffic then that all the time and is still standing because it was "over engineered."

    • @melissapadilla5611
      @melissapadilla5611 Месяц назад

      ​@christianboehlefeld5168 how bout that new bay bridge?

  • @Anubarak313
    @Anubarak313 Месяц назад +37

    American steel used to mean something. It's a real shame we just don't produce like we used to.

    • @gamesguy
      @gamesguy Месяц назад +3

      It didn't mean jack. He's comparing a forged vs cast hammer. A modern forged hammer would be just as strong if not stronger.
      Typical clickbait video

    • @Nesto_
      @Nesto_ Месяц назад +1

      That’s because most production got outsourced to countries like China where they do it cheaper. Result is the products get worse while companies line their pockets.

    • @Nesto_
      @Nesto_ Месяц назад +2

      @@gamesguy it’s not clickbait because that IS an American made hammer from the 1900s vs a modern one made in China. Obviously the difference is entirely in material quality, but that’s kinda the point. The reason people get turned off when they see “made in China” isn’t because that country’s products are simply inferior, it’s because that means the material and assembly standards are lower so you it probably won’t be very good.

    • @gamesguy
      @gamesguy Месяц назад

      @@Nesto_ it is entirely clickbait because like most people, you have zero clue about manufacturing or hammers.
      Steel has grades, he intentionally picked an old forged hammer to compare to a cheap modern cast hammer. A modern higher quality forged hammer from China would be just as strong if not stronger than that old hammer.
      Chinese factories make some of the highest quality goods in the world. IF you're willing to pay for it. The problem is American companies often tell the Chinese manufacturer they want the lowest possible price - which naturally results in the lowest quality product.
      You simply have no clue about the topic beyond the usual HURR CHINA BAD memes.

    • @Nesto_
      @Nesto_ Месяц назад

      @@gamesguy You're making a lot of assumptions and you're pretty far off the mark, I suspect you know less about this topic than you think you do. You may have even not read my comment.
      No, Chinese factories do not make some of the highest quality goods in the world; they manufacture a majority of components, both good and bad, some of which are used in or entirely comprise high quality goods which are assembled elsewhere. There is a pretty big difference because if a product is assembled in China for international shipping it is typically made to a laxer standard with less regulation and international customers have no legal recourse if the product is faulty.
      Meanwhile if for example you buy a Volkswagen, even though a majority of its components are likely manufactured in China the car itself is assembled by a German company and so it adheres to EU standards. As a citizen of the western world there are legal actions you can take if such a product is faulty or misleadingly advertised. None of this applies to Chinese made products.
      Yes I know about steel grades, hence why I mentioned material quality. However when it comes to Chinese assembled products there is no guarantee of quality regardless of price or what it says on the website because, once again, the company is liable to nothing as long as it adheres to Chinese laws. If you buy a fairly expensive hammer that says it's made of high-grade tool steel, you might find out down the line that it was a sham product that got taken off the site and now there is nothing you can do about the fact you just got scammed. It's an entirely different thing when it comes to products assembled in the west because (due to legal responsibilities) companies have to make sure that their components fit the standards of the countries they operate in, so as a part of their assembly line they have to already have vetted and tested those parts or YOU CAN SUE THEM FOR NEGLEGANCE.
      Now lets get into why all of this is the way it is. All of these parts are manufactured in China because labor is extremely cheap there, so they could sell them for cheaper meaning western manufacturers couldn't compete. Why is labor so much cheaper in China? Effective slavery, worker and child exploitation, as well as those lax regulations I mentioned earlier. Even high quality parts made there are often the result of somebody getting screwed, but in the current state of the economy it's not like there's a way to avoid funding this shit as an individual.

  • @andrewchristiansen8311
    @andrewchristiansen8311 Месяц назад +145

    You did that hammer justice son. Tell your cat I said spspspsps

    • @BuckC
      @BuckC Месяц назад +6

      Cat saw that hammer and immediately had to come over and give mad spspspspsps

  • @joeniccoli1916
    @joeniccoli1916 10 дней назад +1

    I found a super old 4 lb. Craftsman mini-sledge at a yard sale for $2.00 a while back. A bit of a chip in the wood handle but still very functional.

  • @stephanM5
    @stephanM5 Месяц назад +12

    I think you may have put the handle in upside down as the wider part of the hole in the hammer head is supposed to be on top so that when you drive wedges in from the top it expands the handle preventing the hammer head from "flying off the handle" as the expression goes. Otherwise a great restoration of a beautiful hammer head.

    • @willythewave
      @willythewave Месяц назад

      Yep, it`s upside down.

    • @notachannel7495
      @notachannel7495 Месяц назад +2

      Yeah, but when all you have is a hydraulic press...

    • @peterneumann7145
      @peterneumann7145 Месяц назад

      Chinese would have got it correct.!!!!!!

    • @dantaylor9211
      @dantaylor9211 Месяц назад

      I make all my own handles, still using draw knives, lately even started my own knives, never use steel wedges, always wood, and unless someone with no idea of how to swing a hammer, sorry gf, but yeah, I mean you, my handles do not fail. Yeah, your handle is not worth the effort you took to press it in.

  • @jkgaming0565
    @jkgaming0565 Месяц назад +17

    1:05 bro rocked breaking his hand with that

    • @mason069
      @mason069 Месяц назад

      Yeah I was expecting him to wear a glove or something

  • @mrstandfast2212
    @mrstandfast2212 Месяц назад +11

    This experiment could stand as metaphor for modernity versus tried and tested (literally in this instance) quality. So much of what is on offer today is ephemeral, and deliberately so, as the makers want us to keep on consuming and buying more. Over here in the UK, I find exactly the same thing. I'm a woodworker, and I have modern tools which have built in obsolescence and original tools which are 100 to 150 years old and still work perfectly.
    So much of what is lauded as being green or renewable is actually the exact opposite. The greatest waste of energy and resources are products with a limited lifespan and the consequent waste thereafter.

    • @filibertkraxner305
      @filibertkraxner305 Месяц назад +1

      Exactly! I'm glad I inherited a whole shed full of old woodworking tools over 15 years ago. Most saws, files, axes were in fine condition. The rest I gave some tlc and they'll also serve my son for his whole life when the time comes. No batteries or plastic in those tools to go bad.

    • @RAWDEAL064
      @RAWDEAL064 Месяц назад

      Between that and the whole "right to repair" thing

  • @markbertolet1985
    @markbertolet1985 11 дней назад

    I have always called a 2 to 4 lb. Short handle hammer an Engineers hammer, and are primarily used for driving stakes or lighter jobs. A Sledge hammer is a 4 to 16 lbs. hammer used for smashing concrete, stone, or demo work.

  • @tootallslim4085
    @tootallslim4085 2 месяца назад +50

    What an absolutely beautiful job restoring that hammer!

  • @TheAutumnWind_RN4L
    @TheAutumnWind_RN4L Месяц назад +155

    What about a 2023 American?

    • @MrSuperJensen
      @MrSuperJensen Месяц назад +31

      Yeah it would be nize to see if the quality have dropped through the ages.

    • @SixtySixHundred-1982
      @SixtySixHundred-1982 Месяц назад +13

      I was wondering the same.

    • @lansfriszt7767
      @lansfriszt7767 Месяц назад +57

      Sledgehammer development is now contracted to Lockheed Martin so the 2023 American sledgehammers will be available in 2046 and cost $25 million a piece.

    • @CoyoteBytes
      @CoyoteBytes Месяц назад +22

      Chinese in American box

    • @Mantikal
      @Mantikal Месяц назад +8

      @@CoyoteBytes Just like who makes the American flag now

  • @thomasbooth7532
    @thomasbooth7532 Месяц назад +10

    Thanks for doing the press test. It saved me a lot of time and trouble.

  • @Loki.Lyesmyth
    @Loki.Lyesmyth Месяц назад +398

    Wife "He's probably in there watching Instagram models."
    Me:.....
    Beautiful restoration.

  • @greyveteran7007
    @greyveteran7007 2 месяца назад +30

    Bet that was a Yard Sale American Sledge.

  • @PatrickDobak-t7r
    @PatrickDobak-t7r Месяц назад +38

    You got rid of the lovely patina. I am proud to use my antique tools.

    • @noelstephenryan4837
      @noelstephenryan4837 Месяц назад +6

      Totally agree, I would have only changed the handle.

    • @mattywho8485
      @mattywho8485 Месяц назад +5

      @@noelstephenryan4837 I certainly would not have welded up dimples in that hammer, but I would have at least ground off that nasty lip around the strike face

    • @anthonyb5279
      @anthonyb5279 Месяц назад +8

      I would have just acid treated the rust and used it as is. But it looks nice all shined up too.

    • @aname6717
      @aname6717 Месяц назад +4

      yeah some wd40 and sanding would've been enough this just wiped it's identity

  • @MagioneUmbria
    @MagioneUmbria 8 дней назад

    I spent time in China as a production supervisor for structural steel. I came away understanding this: fabrication is a pillar of Chinese culture - those guys make stuff.

  • @undertow2142
    @undertow2142 Месяц назад +50

    That’s a damn fine hammer. It’s good for another 100 years.

    • @bonle2755
      @bonle2755 Месяц назад

      Lol but China 🇨🇳 know how to make DC politicians working as lapdogs for them . Nowadays even Biden’s brain still made in China 😂😂😂

    • @lionhead123
      @lionhead123 Месяц назад

      it'll be the only thing left to dig up by aliens after we have all gone. and they'd know we were a fine race.