Estwing E3-13PM – Pico, mango de vinilo de nailon, ligero, 771 g

$52,96

comprar ahora

Descripción

Price: 52,96€
(as of Oct 04, 2024 01:03:58 UTC – Details)




ELECCIÓN SUPERIOR DE GEÓLOGOS EN TODO EL MUNDO – Los martillos de piedra elegidos por los Rockhounds, buscadores y contratistas de todo el mundo.
Superficie cuadrada y punta puntiaguda: este versátil martillo de piedra está diseñado para usar el grano para abrir piedras y utilizar el martillo para conducir cinceles.
Forjadas en una sola pieza: las herramientas de Rockhounding más duraderas y duraderas están hechas de una sola pieza de acero sólido y se muelen en el diseño óptimo para su uso.
Mango patentado que absorbe los golpes – Reducción del 70% de las vibraciones de choque, el mango moldeado de Estwing proporciona una comodidad óptima sin deslizamiento, durabilidad y excelente agarre en todas las condiciones del sitio
Fabricado en Estados Unidos: desde 1923, nuestras herramientas se han fabricado con orgullo en Rockford, IL con el mejor acero americano.

Nuestra puntuación
¡Haz clic para puntuar esta entrada!
(Votos: 0 Promedio: 0)

5 Replies to “Estwing E3-13PM – Pico, mango de vinilo de nailon, ligero, 771 g”

  1. I waited so many years to buy this hammer. Would put it in my cart, take it out of my cart. Try to forget it. I thought it would be so nice for car trips, to stop and investigate rocks along the way and satisfy my amateur geologist soul. I finally ordered it and it’s so beautiful. Strong and well made and with such a nice leather grip and textured face. I’m going out to break up some of the local rocks and look for fossils. And now I feel like a real archeologist with the same hammer my professional geologist friends have!

  2. Great for the lighter tasks and hounding ore gets into the tighter spots for prying out the finds and reveals. Good for ice picking too. Stands up to my torture weight testing with little flex not sure if it would take more than 800-1000lbs of prying pressure but does the deed.

  3. First off, this is my second Estwing geohammer, the first was purchased over 40 years ago and was heavily used professionally in the field. Once I left the field it was put in storage where it eventually disappeared. The new one is the “lightweight” version which is perfect for my current hobby trips in the field. It is ample for light duty rock breakdown, is easier to carry and so far works well. If I needed a more aggressive tool I’d have purchased the regular heavy version. This one is highly satisfying and recommended.I see than many Amazon reviews are by folks who know little about geohammers, or hammers in general. First, all hammer weights are based on the weight of the hammer head, not the total weight of the tool. This is traditional going back to the time when all hammers had wooden handles. For example, a five pound sledge hammer weighs more than five pounds – just the steel head weights that much. This geohammer has a head weight of about 13 ounces and a total weight of one and one-half pounds. Understanding a tool’s terminology helps to avoid incorrect purchases and disappointment.One of the first things I was taught as a budding geologist was that the pointy end of a geohammer is seldom used in the field – the blunt end does 90% of the work required. If you try to pound the pointy end much on hard rock it will bend and become blunt – this is on purpose! If it was tempered hard to withstand the extreme forces from a heavy swing onto very hard rock it would be too brittle and would shatter, potentially injuring the user or a bystander. Machinists should understand this. The pointy end is used for prying apart existing cracks, loosening soil around the edges of rocks, etc. If you don’t know how to use the tool, YouTube has videos made by professional geologists to teach you. There would be fewer unhappy reviewers if folks knew even a little bit about what they are buying.

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *

Please reload

Please Wait