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Five of the best: High-tech hammers

Five of the best: High-tech hammers
Five of Gizmag's favorite high-tech hammers
Five of Gizmag's favorite high-tech hammers
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Picard's magnetic nail holder
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Picard's magnetic nail holder
The Cole Bar Hammer: bang the head on the pry bar to make a demolition tool
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The Cole Bar Hammer: bang the head on the pry bar to make a demolition tool
The Cole Bar Hammer: bang the head on the pry bar to make a demolition tool
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The Cole Bar Hammer: bang the head on the pry bar to make a demolition tool
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer's head rotates 90 degrees to open up new angles of work
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Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer's head rotates 90 degrees to open up new angles of work
ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer: exploded view
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ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer: exploded view
Picard's Carpenter's Roofing Hammer
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Picard's Carpenter's Roofing Hammer
The Cole Bar Hammer: angle locks every 15 degrees
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The Cole Bar Hammer: angle locks every 15 degrees
The Cole Bar Hammer: becomes a 1/2" socket when separated
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The Cole Bar Hammer: becomes a 1/2" socket when separated
The Cole Bar Hammer extends into a crow bar
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The Cole Bar Hammer extends into a crow bar
The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
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The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
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The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
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The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
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The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer: rotating head opens up new angles
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Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer: rotating head opens up new angles
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger
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Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger
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Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger
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Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer - the head rotates 90 degrees to open up new angles of work
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Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer - the head rotates 90 degrees to open up new angles of work
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer - head rotates 90 degrees to open up new angles of work
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Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer - head rotates 90 degrees to open up new angles of work
ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
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ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
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ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer: shock mount in blue
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ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer: shock mount in blue
ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
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ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
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ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
Stiletto's TiBone titanium hammer
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Stiletto's TiBone titanium hammer
Five of Gizmag's favorite high-tech hammers
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Five of Gizmag's favorite high-tech hammers
View gallery - 26 images

People have been banging nails into things for nearly five and a half thousand years, if archaeologists are correct. And wood is such a versatile and abundant building material that we’re sure to be banging spiky bits of metal into it for thousands of years to come. But how similar is the hammer going to look at that stage? What is the state of the art in hammer technology? Are they still just flat-ended bits of metal on the end of sticks? Let’s take a look at five hammers that aim to push one of mankind’s (other) oldest professions forward.

1 – Picard’s Carpenter’s Roofing Hammer

Picard's magnetic nail holder
Picard's magnetic nail holder

The ultimate in thumb protection, this hammer holds the nail for you on the first stroke so you can use it one-handed. The nail sits neatly in a groove on top of the head and is held in by a small magnet. Probably not the greatest in terms of precision, but very nifty when you’re hanging onto a ladder, for example, if you're a carpenter, and you're doing some roofing.

Plus, any product that can be successfully demonstrated in a 20-second video is a winner in my books.

Product page: Picard’s Carpenter’s Roofing Hammer

2 – The Craftsman NEXTEC Rotating-Head Autohammer

Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger
Craftsman's NEXTECH autohammer, with Lithium-ion battery pack and charger

Outstanding when your target surface is awkwardly positioned or hard to get to, the Autohammer bangs nails in without needing to be swung. You just position the nail against the magnetic head, stick it on the wood, pull the trigger, and press down as the battery-powered hammer action thumps the top of the nail at a rate of 2,000 impacts per minute.

It’s got a rotating head to open up more hammering options than previous models, and it’s got LEDs to light up the area you’re about to stick a nail into. Very nifty.

Product page: Craftsman NEXTEC Rotating-Head Autohammer

3 – Stiletto’s TiBone TBII-15 Titanium Hammer

Stiletto's TiBone titanium hammer
Stiletto's TiBone titanium hammer

If you whack in a lot of nails, US$263 might not seem like a bad deal for this blinged-out beauty. The TiBone series is a titanium body with a rubber grip and a replaceable steel striking head. Stiletto says this 15 oz (425 g) beauty "drives like a 28 oz steel hammer" and communicates 10 times less shock to your hand per strike. Its sideways mounted nail puller delivers extra leverage when pulling nails as well.

Product page: TiBone TBII-15

4 – ATOMdesign’s S2 Framing Hammer

ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer
ATOMdesigns' S2 Framing Hammer

The work of an Arizona design company, the S2 mounts a steel head on a wooden handle, but adds a shock absorption layer to make it easier on one’s delicate hands. The heads are replaceable with an allen wrench, there’s a 2-stage nail pulling system and, like the Picard, it holds the nail for you on the first strike. Very nifty, although at this stage it’s just a prototype, and I’m not sure I’d back the shock resistant insert to stand the test of time.

Source: ATOMdesign

5 – The Cole-Bar Hammer

The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails
The Cole Bar Hammer has also been known to bang in nails

The Cole-Bar doesn’t seem satisfied just banging nails in. Instead, it acts like a Swiss Army hammer and opens out 180 degrees and uses the nail puller end as a pry bar. On the way to 180 degrees, it clicks in every 15 degrees to provide a set square and crude angle guide with a ruler up the side.

You can pull it apart, leaving you with a demolition tool – you bang the hammer end on the pry bar end to split wood – and the pivot point itself is a standard 0.25 in socket driver. That’s a whole lot of features for a single hammer, although as it still hasn’t hit the market, it remains to be seen exactly how well it’ll do any one of its many jobs.

Source: Cole-Bar

View gallery - 26 images
7 comments
7 comments
Richardf
Not to sure if i agree with trees being in use in thousands of years. Trees or wood proably have about a hundred or so years left in them . 3d printed wood instead of plastics might evolve when the feed tray allows such substances. But it would mostly be an artifical substances to look like wood rather then actual wood ,Real wood could still be used but it would be an exculsive thing and maybe not in the expensive way you and i think in terms of current exculsive. The main thing is that in the feild of construction there will be far more cost effective and supirior man made products availble to us which again can simulate any wood varity we wish for at a fiction of current prices. Sorry i cant find anything to comment on the hammers ,you just keep on banging i guess.
Joel Detrow
Dude, wood is one of the most sustainable building materials out there. Have you heard of the reasons to build entire skyscrapers out of the stuff? http://www.ted.com/talks/michael_green_why_we_should_build_wooden_skyscrapers
Grunchy
I think hammers and nails are pretty much out of date, since the 1970s. In Canada, they have been almost completely replaced by Robertson head screws. If you go around any Canadian construction site, the only banging you're likely to hear is from an air nailer for shingles or for trim.
Volodya Kotsev
Hmmm, how about a hammer that is able to: 1. Bang nails of ANY size and mass; 2. Bang nails of any size and mass in ANY direction; 3. Bang nails of any size and mass in any direction inside ANYTHING (provided the nail is strong enough); 4. Do all of the above in ANY environment regardless of gas/fluid temperature, pressure, pivoting point, space, light... Yes, it has been invented, patented...
LegalAlien
Loz, As a biker I always love to read your motorcycle related articles but, as a carpenter I have to advice you to stay away from writing nonsense about hammers, like above. You obvious don't have a clue how a professional uses his/her hammer in the real world. I have had my Stiletto for almost five years now and I love it. The super light weight of the hammer got rid of the chronic pain in my forearm from swinging full steel Estwings for years. The Picard is "just" a hammer and not a Roofing hammer, there is no roofer, or carpenter, out there that will use the hammer's magnetic option for every nail they put in. You make it sound like that the little magnet in the hammer's head is special but, it's not, there are lots of hammers out there with the same feature. I've used it on my Stiletto maybe a handful of times over the years that I have owned the hammer. The Craftsman and Cole-Bar hammer is homeowner stuff, no professional, that uses a hammer on a daily base, likes to fiddle around with something like a Cole-Bar. Your choice of hammers don't belong together in the same "Five of the best: High-tech hammers" article.
LegalAlien
@ Grunchy, You gave it away by starting with "I think". Let me tell you, you think wrong. I don't know which part of Canada you're talking about, but I'm a Carpenter in Canada and I don't recognize what you are saying at all. Yes, the Robertson screw head is great, superior to Philips or slotted screw heads. But there are different applications for screws and nails. On "Canadian construction sites" 99% of the walls and sheathing are still being nailed (stapled), either by nail gun or hand, and not screwed.
Rt1583
@ Joel - Where is the full disclosure on the idea you support? Mr. Green denigrates standard buildings because they have emmisions of X tons of carbon dioxide while he places an equivilant structure made of wood on a pedestal for sequestering 3X tons of carbon dioxide.
What's the full story? What is the carbon cost of harvesting the wood? What is the cabon cost of making a tree into an engineered component that can be used in a 40 storey structure? What is the environmental cost of treating these engineered members (since they can't be readily maintained once the structure is built) against any and all vectors that would otherwise act to cause the destruction/decomposition of the wood? If this process is to be implemented, where are new trees going to be planted (how much more land will it take to support this uptick in lumber usage)? How long will it take for a newly planted tree to perform (in the act of carbon sequestration) at the same level as the tree it replaces? What is the environmental cost of constantly building and detroying an ecosystem to support building these wooden skyscrapers? How long will a wooden skyscraper last when compared to its equivilant made in the traditional methods? What is the lifetime maintenance cost when compared to a traditional structure?
The link you posted is nothing more than the same propaganda used by any individual or organization trying to sell their idea. Much like those who tout the electric car as the end all, be all; the only information presented is that which shows the idea in a positive light while everything else is left in the dark. If you want an idea to gain traction and support then, at the very least, have enough faith in your idea that it can stand on its own against full disclosure.