A hammer is a tool meant to deliver blows to a target, causing it to move or deform. The most common uses are for driving nails, fitting parts, and breaking up objects. Hammers are often designed for a specific purpose, and so their design varies quite a lot. Usual features are a handle and a head, with most of the weight in the head. The basic design is hand-operated, but there are also many mechanically operated models for heavier uses.
The hammer is a basic tool of many professions, and can also be used as weapon. Either way, it is perhaps the oldest human tool, perhaps even older than the earliest Homo species.
By analogy, the name hammer has also been used for many mechanical parts and devices that are designed to deliver blows, e.g. in the caplock mechanism of firearms.
The head usually has a flat striking surface on one side. The opposite side of the head may have a second striking surface; or a claw or wedge to pull nails, or may be shaped like a ball as in the ball-peen hammer. Some upholstery hammers have a magnetized appendage, to pick up tacks.
Popular hand-powered variations include:
Mechanically-powered hammers often look quite different from the hand tools, but nevertheless most of them work on the same principle. They include:
In professional framing carpentry, the hammer has almost been completely replaced by the nail gun. In professional upholstery, its chief competitor is the staple gun.
Consistently driving nails without bending them is a matter of simple, repetitive practice. However, keeping in mind that your objective is to get the weighted hammer head moving at a right angle to the nail head helps. Your arm and hand should be removed as much as possible from the interaction of forces at the moment the head hits the nail, allowing a clean transfer of energy on one directional axis. Taking time to get your body into optimum position helps, too. Relax, take time to get a ladder if you need it; climb down your ladder and move it if you need to change position -- don't wait until your nail is half-bent and you are frustrated!
Nails heat up with friction in the material and impact from the hammer -- and bend more easily when warm -- so the quicker you drive them, the better. A good goal would be one stroke to set the nail, two to drive and one to finish or 'set' the head. No matter how well aimed, lots of weak strokes risk heating the nail, and increase the chance that small variations in the material being nailed will deflect the small forces being delivered, causing the nail to bend. A fast-moving, heavy hammer head will penetrate small variations in the material and drive the nail straight through them.
In the swing that precedes each blow, a certain amount of kinetic energy gets stored in the hammer's head, equal to the length D of the swing times the force f produced by the muscles of the arm and by gravity. When the hammer strikes, the head gets stopped by an opposite force coming from the target; which is equal and opposite to the force applied by the head to the target. If the target is a hard and heavy object, or if it is resting on some sort of anvil, the head can travel only a very short distance d before stopping. Since the stopping force F times that distance must be equal to the head's kinetic energy, it follows that F will be much greater than the original driving force f—roughly, by a factor D/d. In this way, even the feeblest person can produce a force strong enough to bend steel, or crack the hardest stone.
In the 1982 film Pink Floyd The Wall, a circular logo featuring two crossed hammers was used on armbands, flags, and banners during the t rally scene. These hammers were also featured in the infamous "marching hammers" animation loop.
The song If I Had a Hammer has been a top ten hit and was considered an anthem of the Civil Rights Movement. It has been recorded by many artists, including Peter, Paul, and Mary, Trini Lopez, and Leonard Nimoy. The song begins:
A famous adage states that "When all you've got is a hammer, everything looks like a nail."
A common theme in the Mario series is the use of a hammer, used in two styles. One was as a power-up (in Donkey Kong and, more recently, Mario Vs. Donkey Kong) that destroyed barrels, the other was as a throwing item, first wielded by the Hammer Bros.
In the SpongeBob SquarePants episode SB-129, SpongeTron uses a "futuristic" chrome laser hammer to thaw Squidward.
The Swedish power metal band, Hammerfall, has many songs and lyrics about the hammer,like the song "Hammer of Justice"
In The Fairy OddParents Vicky uses a hammer by the name of Mr.Hammer to destroy Tootie's toys.
"Weird Al" Yankovic mentions a hammer in his song "Hardware Store" on his Poodle Hat Album
Hammers | Metalworking hand tools
Hamor | Чук | Martell | Kladivo | Hammer | Hammer | Σφυρί | Martillo | Martelo | Marteau | Čekić | Martelo | פטיש | Āmurs | Hamer (gereedschap) | Hammer (redskap) | Marté | Młotek | Hammer | Чекић | Vasara | Hammare (handverktyg) | Çekiç | 鎚子