THE FOREVER HAMMER
ESTWING RIP
On a summer afternoon 40 years ago,
my boss, Paul, returned from the lum-
beryard with more than lumber. He also
had a pair of hammers, one each for his
young helpers. I picked one, my col-
league Winifred (we called him Winny)
picked the other: a fiberglass-handled
Plumb with a milled face.
My choice: an Estwing with a smooth
face and a straight ripping claw. I own
and use that hammer to this day. It
helped put me through college, and later
lasted through countless repair and con-
struction jobs for a young family and as
many with me in my work as a volunteer.
Forged from a single piece of steel, its
head will never come flying off. It can’t.
Even the vinyl rubber grip is molded not
just onto the handle but into it.
This is what makes an Estwing more
than a hammer. It’s a piece of expertise
wrought in heat-treated steel. Use it for
all it’s worth, and pass it down to the
next generation of hammer swingers.
Now picture my Estwing on a blister-
ing Saturday afternoon in Philadelphia
decades after I got it, as fellow volun-
teer, carpenter, Pop Mech contributor,
and good friend Mark Clement and I
worked to install a fence at a small park
and garden we were building. Out of
each posthole came more than dirt.
There was rock, chunks of bricks, hunks
of ancient bottles, oyster shells, pieces
of smashed-up plumbing, even the
water pump from a car. In the midst of
one particularly troublesome hole, Mark
asked to borrow the Estwing hammer
hanging off my belt. He then used it
to break up the debris that was block-
ing our progress. He handed it back to
me, and I inspected it carefully, expect-
ing to see considerable damage. I found
nothing.—R.B.
- BEST SMOOTH-CUTTING
CIRCULAR-SAW BLADES
Spyder 13007 and 13018
From $15
We’ve made a lot of cuts with cir-
cular saws, and these blades
provide as clean a slice as any
we’ve seen. Consider them smooth
and smoother; the 60-tooth 13018
delivers a glass-like surface and
the 40-tooth 13007 nearly so.
Those teeth are ground to what’s
called an alternate top-bevel pro-
file, which reduces splintering and
back pressure by providing room
for chips and sawdust to fall free. - BEST STEP DRILL BITS
Diablo DSD1375S15 $51
These bits quickly, cleanly, and
accurately bore holes in plastic
and metal up to 1⁄8 inch. Still, we
tried them in steel a touch thicker
than that, and they did fine. The
split-point tip fights the tendency
to skid off the starting point. - BEST TWIST DRILL BITS
Milwaukee 48-89-4631 $25
T h i s 2 3 - p i e c e s e t —s i z e s 1⁄1 6 - i n c h
to 3⁄8-inch—proved its mettle in
our testing. Each bit is ground
with a sophisticated and thick
twist and tip geometry for an accu-
rate start, speedy chip removal,
and a clean hole. - BEST THICK-METAL
RECIPROCATING-SAW BLADE
Diablo DS0908CFA $20
Braze nine carbide teeth per inch
to a f lexible reciprocating saw
blade and grind them to a wave
profile. That’s what Diablo did, and
now you can cut hard steel alloys
and cast iron up to a thickness of
9⁄16 inch. These blades are tough,
but you need an equally hardy saw. - BEST TOOL BELT
ToughBuilt TB - CT-102-3 $43
This ToughBuilt consists of a pad-
ded 31⁄2-inch-wide belt, through
which passes a strip of webbing to
provide structural support for tool
bags, each of which clicks on and
off the belt. The system is clever,
tough, and comfortable. - BEST GENERAL-PURPOSE
CIRCULAR-SAW BLADE
Diablo D0724 $10
This is about as close to the ideal
versatile saw blade as you can find.
It quickly and cleanly cuts every
typical construction lumber, from
Doug fir to pressure-treated wood.
Each of its 24 carbide teeth has a
tip shaped like a spear, with bevels
on the sides and front. This geom-
etry reduces drag, particularly
important for cordless saws, which
need all the help they can get.
← BEST OVERALLS
Carhartt 102776 $80
Carhartt riffed on its Classic
R01 bib overall (which it still
offers) to make this garment
from 12-ounce duck. A key
modification is an elastic
gusset where the legs and
back panel meet to provide
stretch. Lack of give has been
a common sticking point with
overalls, and the redesign
helps you better tuck in a
hoodie or insulated work shirt.
Carhartt also doubled the
material at the cuffs for dura-
bility. And pockets? Fourteen.
Rivets? It’s got more than your
average passenger plane.
March/April 2021 67