March 31, 201115 yr Pretty off-topic, but I recently saw a movie poster for the upcoming movie Thor, and its ridiculously oversized hammer. I did some rough estimates, and I figure that the hammer is about 4 3/4" by 4 3/4" by 13.5", which would put it (very) roughly at 86 pounds. Good thing he's a god, I guess, I feel reasonably confident I wouldn't look quite as graceful carrying an 86 pound hammer. :P
March 31, 201115 yr That's how he got his name---after swinging that hammer all day he was "real Thor" the next day! It'd be only about 50 pounds in Titanium...
March 31, 201115 yr Bear in mind: fiction! Ironman's suit isn't physically possible, and the only thing you'd get from a radioactive spider bite is poison. Plus, would it look particularly impressive for the Norse thunder god to tote a three-pound cross-peen?
March 31, 201115 yr Is This movie gonna come out in theaters???? I don't keep up with things. We Don't have any theaters in my town or county. Only 200+ in my town. So internet and TV is only chance I get to hear of such. But wouldn't mind seeing a movie about old Thor.
March 31, 201115 yr Thor (Tor) is around here somewhere. He was last seen swimming west after the vikings converted.
April 6, 201115 yr We had a hammer that size when I worked at Austal ship yard in Mobile Ala. It weighed about 15 pounds, "it was aluminum":)
April 6, 201115 yr Which would weigh about 30 pounds in those dimensions. (according to the mass3 calculator over at anvilfire)
April 6, 201115 yr Biggest hammer I've seen was last week. Brian Brazeal had it with him. I believe he said it weighed 30 lbs. That's my little six pound hammer to the left by way of comparison. And yes, they did actually swing it...to drive an anvil stand with the anvil on it into the ground to level it.
April 6, 201115 yr I talked to a fellow who had been in the CCC and he said they had to swing a 32# sledge all day long road building in the mountains. Don't know as to the accuracy of that story but have run across other 32# sledge reports. Seems like 20# is the largest the stores carry nowadays around here and when I married my wife she came equipped with a 17# sledge+handle that is my max in the shop...
April 6, 201115 yr We had a sledge that weighed over 20 pounds when I worked at Sample`s Shipyard. Everybody call it "Monday", cause no matter what day it was if you had to swing it it felt like a Monday. They also had a huge wood mallet had out of Hornbeam that we used to drive oak dunnage and wedges. That one was "The rear admiral" cause it packed more punch than a commander and always kicked your butt.
April 8, 201115 yr We had a sledge that weighed over 20 pounds when I worked at Sample`s Shipyard. Everybody call it "Monday", cause no matter what day it was if you had to swing it it felt like a Monday. They also had a huge wood mallet had out of Hornbeam that we used to drive oak dunnage and wedges. That one was "The rear admiral" cause it packed more punch than a commander and always kicked your butt. Did you also use large wooden mallets known as commanders?
April 8, 201115 yr Well. . . I WAS going out to the forge today, but now I'm tired just from reading this post! These hammers make you appreciate the lighter stuff.
April 8, 201115 yr how you need the right size anvil to go with the hammer and don't forget the tongs Thats not a hammer, this is a hammer.
April 9, 201115 yr Did you also use large wooden mallets known as commanders? I used to know the proper progression of wooden mallets.They ranged from beetle thru commander IIRC. Most of the shipyard hands weren`t as concerned with correct names. They just referred to them as a BFH, RBFH or "Get the Admiral". :)
April 9, 201115 yr Face it, if that dude can't lift it, this Pillsbury Doughboy body doesn't stand a chance. In theaters 6-16-2011.
April 11, 201115 yr Thor (Tor) is around here somewhere. He was last seen swimming west after the vikings converted. Converted to what? And why. A good longship,Shield,sword and axe and this old swendska will sirvive Course a M2 or a M60 would help. BTW my uncle was Thor. K
April 11, 201115 yr This i me holding a 25Kg sledge. This sledge was used by a man working in the foundry in Björneborg, Sweden. He worked with breaking up the 60Kg pig iron ingots but he was disappointed with the standard sledges since it took him 2-3 blows to break the pig iron, so he ordered this sledge instead. With this sledge he could break the pigs with only one blow.
April 11, 201115 yr Just keep in mind the Norse were a little more practical than that. The Mjöllnir ("Crusher") of legend can change size so that Thor carries it around in his tunic (imagine your hammer shrinking so that you could carry it in your shirt pocket), and when he needs it, it will change to whatever size he happens to need it, usually the one that lets him crush skulls. Although, there was that incident where he flattened a mountain... ...in any case, I doubt you'll see it shrink up and go on a necklace or something in the movie, because Hollywood has no setting other than "huge, loud and flashy" As an interesting aside, Mjöllnir is actually a screwup. The handle was supposed to be longer, but while the smith was forging it, a fly (purportedly Loki in disguise)came down and bit the guy on the bellows in the eye, which made him stop pumping air into the forge for a second and messed up the heat. Apparently whatever material Dwarves forge is very finicky for heat, and their forges are very finicky for air...
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.