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Itty Bitty Trip Hammer....

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Caught this on ebay and thought it was neat.  It appears to be something you'd mount to the anvil, but the integral anvil looks to have dovetails cut in it.  No telling how it was mounted or modified over the years.

 

It'd certainly pack a whallop with that coil spring firing it down on the anvil, but I don't see it being practical for anything more than maybe setting rivets.  Way too slow for hot work, but a neat example of ingenuity.

 

Something you don't see every day.

 

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Did you buy this?

If not can you remember the name it was called on bay?

I think it is super cool!

Dave

Dave Its on my EBay watch list Posted under blacksmits tools Get out your money Its cool Forge on and make beautiful things Jim

It looks like it was meant to be bolted to the anvil trough the pritchel hole to me. Looking at picture number three.

-Crazy Ivan

Edit: Oops, never mind, Looks like the anvil sits lower then the frame so my theory is junk. Oh well.

  • Author

Did you buy this?

If not can you remember the name it was called on bay?

I think it is super cool!

Dave

Dave, it's still up for auction and I don't have any plans to bid on it.  It's listed by "theantiquefarmer" as: Blacksmith hand cranked trip hammer.  Current bid is less than ten bucks and there's no reserve mentioned.  I'd go for it.

It'd certainly pack a whallop with that coil spring firing it down on the anvil, but I don't see it being practical for anything more than maybe setting rivets.  Way too slow for hot work, but a neat example of ingenuity.

 

Something you don't see every day.

 

 

That is neat!  It's a beading hammer, patented by George E. Morris: http://www.google.com/patents/US1162871

That is as amazing as it is absurd! 

Yup I am bidding- just too cool, user or not :)

Dave

That's just worn paint, not fire scale.  Looks like it'll need a new spring on the ratchet mechanism, but other than that it seems in good shape.

Greetings All,

 

Nick is correct it is a beading hammer...  The lower portion is the forming die..  It was used to form the beads on boiler tubes...  Hang on Dave I will be bidding..  Life is fun..

 

Forge on and make beautiful things

Jim

Yes it is for rolling the end of a blue tube in a boiler. The round part goes into the tube next to the one next to the one you are rolling it auto indexes to go round and round inside the tube. It is not a blacksmith tool although I have one in my collection

Took a look yesterday and it was up to $228. Way beyond my 'Man, that's cool' budget :)

Dave

$271.00  at 8;30  I was out at 100.00  Cool but not that cool...

I have rolled about a kazillion boiler tubes in my days but haven't seen anything like this. We had air tools that lipped the tubes and rolled them back onto the tube sheet. That tool was  before my time in the trade.

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