Fairmount auto body hammer. Used to knock down small high spots in a panel.
@Ordolph3 ай бұрын
Yeah, I was gonna say that's gotta be for forming sheet metal. Body work hammers come in all sorts of funny shapes and sizes, and usually have small heads and long handles.
@Someone_in_the_comments3 ай бұрын
As soon as I saw it I knew it had to be for banging the dents out of hard to reach places on a car's body.
@JolynBowler3 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree. an Autobody Hammer. 💙🌻💙
@DD-vn2ev3 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree. My Dad was an auto factory worker and would bring home old tools that were being replaced and thrown out. That's what it looks like and something to do with pop rivets, or at least that's how he used it😊
@bobanofat25853 ай бұрын
@@Ordolph i just love that for once i knew something Adam did not :D
@NavyDocHM33 ай бұрын
That hammer is made by Fairmont Manufacturing Company which opened in Cleveland Ohio in 1917; they started out making dollies and tools for the ‘horseless carriages’, then moved onto other wrenches and hammers for the automobile. During WWII, Fairmont made forging tools for making tank parts. Thanks Adam! Your great!
@shawnmichaelis16093 ай бұрын
which hammer? 1st or 2nd
@_SurferGeek_3 ай бұрын
@@shawnmichaelis1609 The one that Adam read Fairmont off of...
@robertlearned92513 ай бұрын
@@shawnmichaelis1609 2nd
@pootsieman3 ай бұрын
cleveland rocks!
@matthewhoward81913 ай бұрын
They used this hammer to murder horses without leaving a substantial mark, thus giving rise to the horseless carriage
@kellylinn7243 ай бұрын
It knows as a Cats eye hammer for auto body. The pointed end is for picking out smaller dings and the rounder end is used for tapping larger, more shallow dents, like hail damage. The handle is so long because they have been making these since cars have been being built. They became very popular in the late 1930’s when cars started having all steel larger roofs (known as Turret Tops). The long handle made it easy to reach in and tap dents out in the huge roofs. They are very popular and still made to this day. The older Fairmount’s are extremely sought after by those in the know. I have been doing auto body for over 40 years. I also collect tools mainly auto body/sheet metal tools. Especially Fairmount’s and as you know they don’t make them like they used to and these things last forever. I really like the handcuffs as well.
@frankhiatt52953 ай бұрын
It's not a bartenders tool. It's used for cutting big ice blocks from an ice wagon. It's use predates home refrigeration. Used to be an icehouse in my hometown that used a very similar tool to break large blocks into smaller ones.
@ClockworkChainsaw3 ай бұрын
I have definitely seen something very similar used in bartending. It looks way too small to be used to cut large blocks, the tools for that usually are larger, aren't they?
@georgg.57303 ай бұрын
My guess at the operation would be that the chisel part gets rammed into the ice block by slamming onto the "button" on the other end. Then you would put torque on it via the handle to snap off a piece of ice.
@Ron-d2s3 ай бұрын
First thing I thought with the thumbnail was ice blocks, if you take a big wooden mallet and hit the ball end to drive the blade in.
@JoshSweet3 ай бұрын
@@ClockworkChainsaw. Large blocks on a wagon don’t need a large tool. They need a portable and specific tool to shape the block specific to individual ice boxes. Just the right size
@voodoomann20173 ай бұрын
late reply, but it's called an Ice Knocker, it's companion tool is called an ice chipper. I have a set that was found in my great grandmother's belongings when she passed many years ago. mine looks identical to that one except the handle on his has definitely been replaced or reworked.
@KaneAsIAm3 ай бұрын
That tag at the end (with Adam rummaging through metal objects like a cartoon) was priceless!
@treseb13 ай бұрын
Thank you, I’d paused the video to read the comments and didn’t realize there was a short bonus at the end. 😂
@s00p3rman3 ай бұрын
Those handcuffs are actually mid 20th century not 19th century. English, and probably used by a detective or after the arrest, in a jail or court. They were probably nickel plated and it has since worn off and developed that patina.
@metern3 ай бұрын
The first tool was used by ice wagons/houses to chip pieces of ice in the days before refrigerators. Yes, a bartender might use it too. But the main use was for ice wagons and ice houses 😉.
@ianswopeexhibits52893 ай бұрын
There are Quite a few ice ponds in Falmouth.
@xfrench3 ай бұрын
I assume you'd run a line of holes with an ice pick and then use that to calve off a squared chunk, like a piece of marble.
@metern3 ай бұрын
@@xfrench It's almost like an ice chisel
@kathykuecker3 ай бұрын
I just saw that item on a youtube video about random objects saying "what is this?", and described as an ice chipper.
@metern3 ай бұрын
@@kathykuecker Yup 😁.
@ian9toes3 ай бұрын
I love the fact that we can finally agree the internet is a collective that is far superior in knowledge than any one individual. Adam has remarkable knowledge which is why we watch him yet he is asking his audience what the hammer is and the audience doesn’t disappoint. In the past I’ve had 20 something year olds working at motorbike shops scoff at the information I’d gleaned from a forum, as though they were the only reliable source. Nowadays I take my car to a mechanic with a tricky problem and they’ll ask me, what did the internet say. The beauty about a public forum is if some wrong information is presented it will be corrected in a heartbeat.
@CasualDandyAkaSqwrty3 ай бұрын
Be wary of early 20-somethings, as their self-assurance is built-in and quite firm at times. The red flag in these situations is that they know """"the one thing anyone needs to know about every subject"""" and no further. That doesn't exclude bright people from that age range, they are running on similar shortcomings :) Thanks for your perspective, @ian9toes :)
@sylvisterling87823 ай бұрын
Pinging hammer. Used sometimes with what was known as a pinging block. I happen to own my grandfather's pinging block, along with several other wonderfully hand made tools. A pinging block is a very "irregular" shaped chunk of steel. One edge is curved, one at right angles, a corner that tapers, and another that is half of a 'D' shape, and so on, so that you can hammer out any curve or angle of a sheet of metal (usually an automobile).
@Fore-Four-Dee-Too3 ай бұрын
That hammer is for doing body work. Picking up dents when doing metal finishing. I made one 30 yeears ago when I was working in the automotive restoration business.
@johndoecake3 ай бұрын
Oh thats why i think i saw it, probably on American Hot Rod TV series back in the day, there were body work guys
@BrokenCurtain3 ай бұрын
What's the flat, pointy bit for?
@DarrenMalin3 ай бұрын
@@BrokenCurtain that is the beauty of old tool , I have a load that I have no idea what they where originally for but I found a use for them in body work , if they make the right make or reach the right place , it has a use :)
@ubermenschen013 ай бұрын
@@BrokenCurtain Auto body hammers are like armorer's hammers: lots of different shapes for moving metal in a specific way. Not my field, but a shape like that would be either for making that specific shape (a cone), or for directing the force of the blow to a point. Long handle means it can reach a long way; the small head is that way for the same reason (getting into hard-to-reach places), or b/c it's for delicate work. Or, 3rd option, the long handle means you get more force out at the point when you swing it, and a lighter hammer is easier to swing many times during the day.
@ericpykonen3 ай бұрын
The bit at the end was funny! I could have sworn it was all foley work. 😂 Made me think of a kid's show like Sesame Street where a character runs off screen looking for something, making a ruckus, and running back. It should be reshot with Jamie's muppet!😆
@notahotshot3 ай бұрын
The pitter patter of his footsteps, the clanking, and banging of chains and horseshoes, the clear knocking of wood. I'm 90% sure that was 100% foley work! 🤣
@ZGryphon3 ай бұрын
The only thing it was missing was the classic sound of a round metal plate falling to the floor and spinning down to flat rest, which should've been the last thing before he came back on camera. :)
@s90210h3 ай бұрын
Tested cave foley sample pack droppin' soon ?
@ivanheffner25873 ай бұрын
I thought it was a bit until Adam started to sound confused. I’m still not convinced it wasn’t a bit by the editor to loop / add clanging.
@chaoticature3 ай бұрын
I love to read similar minded comments. I'm a big fan of Slapstick Comedy and this last bit of the video had potential to be even funnier!
@PeteCasey-i4m3 ай бұрын
As to the hammer, it looks exactly like those used in car repair shops to be used on bodywork (dating back to the time when cars were made of metal). -Pete C
@stevengabalis49863 ай бұрын
Yep, back when body filler was molten lead.
@MelroyvandenBerg3 ай бұрын
Yes indeed. For car repairs. By fairmound
@Kilomylesco3 ай бұрын
I don’t know if you knew this, but cars are still made of metal, and never really stopped unless you mean the bumpers.
@budgetmerch3 ай бұрын
Yes, I have a modern version of that made from (I believe) nylon. As soon as I saw it, that came to mind, but people seem to be confirming that as a similar thing from many moons ago.
@tombaker50233 ай бұрын
Funny, I was just thinking that thing would be great for lower quarter panels
@misterkrek3 ай бұрын
Thank you Norm for keeping it rolling and Editor for the outtake, Adam always makes me smile, but you guys gave me the best laugh in last few days! Kudoz!
@pkbreeze083 ай бұрын
Came to say this, that was such an authentic moment that I'm glad they put in.
@SteveTheExploiter3 ай бұрын
The end with all the clanking off screen. It's like a cut scene from a video game. When you are going thru the tutorial and some old hobbit looking thing is rummaging thru his junk to give you your 1st item you'll need in your quest.
@Drakith903 ай бұрын
All that's missing is the random rubber duck "quack" thrown in to make you question just what else is in the pile of random stuff.
@IamtheTolle3 ай бұрын
@@Drakith90 That and a random cat wail.
@BashoftheMonth3 ай бұрын
He was building it on the spot out of Scrap Metal(x5)
@Tom_Losh3 ай бұрын
Fibber McGee's Closet! 😜
@katelinnett90203 ай бұрын
I was waiting to hear the cat! 😆
@DMLand3 ай бұрын
The tag, with Adam rummaging through random bits of metal at the end is a delight. I had to tell my "found sounds"-collecting son about it.
@LooneyFarmGuy3 ай бұрын
That is pretty much Me , looking for anything in my garage 😂
@garytravis93473 ай бұрын
@@LooneyFarmGuy My Wife - "Why are you looking in the garage, it's in the shed." Me - !
@diliff3 ай бұрын
Also his "wait a second...." reminded me of this: kzbin.info/www/bejne/maicd3ybfceXeJo
@mellertid3 ай бұрын
Oh, a sound hobby.
@Precisa723 ай бұрын
I love the end segment, the sound of someone looking through a drawer of metal objects is glorious. It would great to use it as a startup sound or a really long message notification
@Jenthura3 ай бұрын
9:44 looks like we're hearing Adam's thoughts as he gazes into the distance lol
@NathanHarrison73 ай бұрын
Nothing like old steel, and old hardwood. Beautiful.
@informitas01173 ай бұрын
Before shareholders were the real boss.
@sylvisterling87823 ай бұрын
AMEN! I have my grandfather's old hand made screwdriver. The bottom "tang" of the tool is an elongated pear or teardrop shape' flat end, to which has been riveted two blocks of wood, same shape but rounded on the tops or outside edges, and fitted to the handle. It's been worn smooth by decades of handling, and is absolutely one of the most beautiful things to hold! The metal is one solid piece, with a straight slot head. It has served not only as a screwdriver, but also as a wedge. There are hammer marks on the end of the pear shaped handle, and marks to show the straight slot tip has been driven into other substances. I love to just pick it u7p and gaze at it, feel its smoothness, patina and wear.
@newt20102 ай бұрын
I always love going to flea markets because that kind of thing is in my blood. Especially auctions as my dad was an auctioneer for 35 years and we did everything from an estate sales to antiques to farm and implement sales. You name it we sold it. So I love seeing different tools that I have not seen before. Trust me, I have seen tens and thousands over 35 years of helping Dad with auctions. Your find is pretty sweet. Cheers.
@Chayat0freak3 ай бұрын
as an accountant in the late 2000's we had paperclipless paperclip fasteners that did just that. they were much smaller though and couldn't do more than 3 or 4 sheets at a time. Also, had a small book-binding machine for accounts that was a kinda like a Breville for pre-glued spines. If you left it on too long the set of accounts you were binding would burn and let off an awful acrid smell which we referred to as "cooking the books"
@spacehonky63153 ай бұрын
Hmm... I wonder if that's the source of the sort of sly accounting reference "cooking the books"? Interesting. Do you happen to know for sure?
@Chayat0freak3 ай бұрын
@@spacehonky6315 nah, it comes from where it seems, the use of "cook" to create one thing from somthing else.
@DosHemperor3 ай бұрын
@@Chayat0freak I feel this way in my brain talking to people whomst will newt listen " cooking"
@AGM-ut5vs3 ай бұрын
Last hammer is a sheet metal tool. Long handle for extending reach, point for acute strikes, round side for more subtle strikes. Light weight.
@AGM-ut5vs3 ай бұрын
As others noted, long handle extends reach. Light weight, unlike dead blow or ball peen hammer for shaping, this hammer is for repairing dents and small adjustments.
@sirflaps76193 ай бұрын
I did some googling on the hammer. This type of hammer is mentioned in the "Fairmount Houdaille Catalog No. 770 (1971)" (you can find it on the internet archive) on page 38 with the following description: "165-G - PICK HAMMER Lightweight. Provides stubby pick point and high-crown pein-type faces. Long reach, 18” handle. Will ding out small dents in high fins. No need to remove panels. Weight 5 oz. (handle only H-42A-18).
@NavyDocHM33 ай бұрын
@@sirflaps7619 outstanding!
@1967250s3 ай бұрын
Excellent find! Now I have to make one. Looks like a very handy tool for body work.
@1967250s3 ай бұрын
They are still available on Amazon
@NavyDocHM33 ай бұрын
@@1967250s the steel/metal ones or the nylon composition type? Thank you- Doc
@eltonnoway78643 ай бұрын
Yep!... Adams "hammer" shown at 7:38 is indeed item 165-G - PICK HAMMER as well as other tools shown on page 38 of the "Fairmount Houdaille Catalog No. 770 (1971)"
@Nagria21123 ай бұрын
a small rather sad side story and a question: a year ago i fell into a big depression and it feels like i lost this Flame inside that keeps you going, this energy to find new cool things, the sparkling i see in your eyes when you make things or want to tell us a cool story. On some days i can get myself to be passionate about my Topics (Chemist, Videogame Lore, Mtb riding) again but most days its hard to find my spark - "to get out of bed" and start caring at all. i was a active kid, i loved finding out about new things and explore possibilities.... now its often overshadowed by inner pain, mental fatigue and a inner state of wanting to be alone. Its getting better, its hard work and i fight each and every day but people like you keep me going. its such a wonderful thing to see this spark, this inner flame in other human beings. i dont have alot of family and the ones i have a not close physicly or mentaly. Some died, others made me suffer in childhood so i try to avoid them. i got some friends but meeting them every view weeks is not the anchor i would need - i´m not a Kid anymore where you meet you friends after school each day. i dont have a wife or partner. sorry if this gets to personal but my Question is: have you had problems with this, do you know people that had mental problems - and how to light my spark again? how did you not loose passion after all those years, after being hurt, after a hard hitting problem in life? with love from Austria~
@MrBadgas3 ай бұрын
Lovely objects. Makes me chuckle and happy.
@DavidLindes3 ай бұрын
Haha, that outtake is glorious. :)
@Drakith903 ай бұрын
The "Wait a second" after all that rummaging noise? Pure comedy gold.
@MashaT223 ай бұрын
I’ve been in and through the Falmouth and Cape Cod area several times since my childhood on family roadtrips. It’s so beautiful! That is great advice to work hard so you can truly take time away from work. Great haul! Flea markets rock!
@johnbroadus30383 ай бұрын
So glad you showed the cobblers tool, have used one as a door stop on my barn for years and had no idea what it was !
@SpunkMonkey3 ай бұрын
The flea markets and yard sale are what I miss most from New England. Okay, and autumn. And snow. And Halloween season in Salem. I think I'm talking myself into a road trip.
@alexkingsbury22933 ай бұрын
It's gonna be a weird day when I immediately recognize a tool that Adam Savage bought because he had no idea what it was. The man has more tools than I've had hot suppers.
@sunnyyshc3 ай бұрын
the music at the end of the video is gold. dynamic, alive, drama. thank you editor!
@leniere3093 ай бұрын
The first item you showed, my Grand Father called it a boot last ( I don't know if the word last is spelled correctly for this item) when he repaired our shoes and boots when we were kids. My pop was a tinkerer as well and I spent hour upon hour just standing there watching him. Cheers for the video and the memories that it sparked.
@ubermenschen013 ай бұрын
I think a "last" is the pattern for bottom of a shoe; basically, it defines the shape. I've heard people talk about them when discussing leather boots. Perhaps one is named after the other.
@JasDarc3 ай бұрын
Cobbler's last for shoemaking and repairs. My dad had several.
@barbafantfant25973 ай бұрын
Last is (afaik) a "wooden foot", a shaped wood piece that the shoe is constructed on/against. The last defines the shape of the shoe. The leather uppers and the inner sole is put together and shaped agains the last. I think the metal "mini-anvil" in the video is just that, a cobbler´s anvil, used for putting on the outsole of the shoe, also for resoling and repair. Of couse, I guess terminology might change with location etc Source: have been watching a few shoe repair vids in the interest of becoming able to field-repir my own boots.
@orthicon926 күн бұрын
@@barbafantfant2597 Yup. A cobbler's "last" is a replica of a foot, perhaps even a specific regular client's foot with his name on it. The metal thing Adam found was an cobbler's anvil.
@survivingpoverty3 ай бұрын
Hammer is for Auto Body work and other hard to reach sheet metal and copper repair. Have to get me one of those paperless paper clip tools! Thank you Adam for all the years of education!
@denisemcdougal64453 ай бұрын
Clip less paper clip 😂 ❤❤ are still sold in Staples and Amazon and other stores. I enjoy Adam’s joy in discovering new things
@donaldvincent3 ай бұрын
I tried both but couldn't find it anywhere except ebay had an old one with 9 bidders.
@wg20603 ай бұрын
Many times I just enjoy the eloquence and choice vocabulary elements of these discussions.
@RandomToon13 ай бұрын
The first one, I am not going to say that it isn't an ice tool, but before you said that to me it looked like a really old school carpet tucking tool. It would definitely do a subpar job compared to modern tools, so yeah...probably an ice breaking thing, but that was my first instinct.
@zaphodjuniorjr72923 ай бұрын
Hello? Google reverse image search is still a thing. If I am looking at a Lego set in a store, I always search Amazon for the same set and compare the price. Being frugal, I will wait until the price drops because I am on a budget.
@terrilourens63353 ай бұрын
My Jaw DROPPED when I saw what the paperless paper clip did. SO COOL!!!!!!
@Tay-v6h2 ай бұрын
you’re truly an amazing human Adam all the little quirks and overlooked topics or studies thank you for your content always!
@Ulricsworkshop3 ай бұрын
I love my Shoe Last that i picked up from a flea market. As a leather worker, i dont use it for shoes but to reach deep into pouches to replace rivets without damaging the pouch itself.
@vk3zen-rfdesign9803 ай бұрын
the metal lasts were called tingles.
@bl4cksp1d3r3 ай бұрын
Ohh clever
@Ulricsworkshop3 ай бұрын
@@vk3zen-rfdesign980 is that a regional thing? Never heard of them called that.
@robertennor11433 ай бұрын
I see those quite often. Never gave them a thought…….but yes, why not an anvil that can reach inside something. I’m seeing one in my future……
@audiotechlabs46503 ай бұрын
Man, your followers are the most informed and knowledgeable! If they don’t know, they look it up. Great, as always, a dynamite episode Adam! I to love the old tools! Look for them myself. Times have changed, that haul used to cost $20. Long live flea markets and garage yard sales! Thanxz
@unspecified24723 ай бұрын
I find Adam’s videos absolutely fantastic. His approach in my mind is very similar to Rick Steves’ work. A calm and relaxed delivery. All done with passion.
@mrgoorn3 ай бұрын
I really enjoy recognizing a third to half of the "strange tools" that he obtains. All four of these tools were tools we had at the ranch, ad i have used them all.
@Salgood3 ай бұрын
Oh, a cobbler's anvil! My mother had one when I was a kid and she was making sandals. Kind of want one just for nostalgia but they don't come cheap.
@emilyrobinson60803 ай бұрын
Those pliers remind me of a tool in my own collection made for fitting the belts of old sewing machines. Installing one of these belts is a three part process: the leather is cut to length, then a hole is punched in the end that doesnt have a staple pre installed, and finally the staple is pushed through the hole and crimped down. This pair of parallel jaw pliers performs all three tasks in a very elegant way, there is a blade (removable and resharpenable of course) for cutting the belt along with a guide to hold it steady, an awl that punches the hole with perfect centricity as the recieving jaws are bored to the exact size of the standard belt, and a final section has grooves meant to easily facilitate crimping down the staple. As someone who does quite a bit of work with old sewing machines its indispensable. Another tool that is similar is what I thought was a standard paper hole punch at first but the punch actually goes through a protrusion on the side of one jaw, with a small fence that can be set so you can set a consistent depth away from the edge for your hole. The main jaws have a small spring loaded post and swage for installing eyelets, so you punch your hole, place an eyelet on the springloaded post, position the pliers over the newly punched hole, and squeeze for a perfectly set eyelet. It lives with my leatherwork tools and has set idk how many eyelets for me since I rescued it from a box of rusty one-dollar tools at a flea market.
@ibanezleftyclub3 ай бұрын
OMG Adam I spent half my childhood on the Cape and went to the very flea market every year, I was about 5 miles away from it in Sandwich. the cape is always chock full of amazing Yard Sales and Flea Markets all summer, and then of course you have the legendary Brimfield flea market in central MA.
@hasufinheltain13903 ай бұрын
I love that cobbler's last you pulled out at the beginning. It's very different from the ones I'm used to seeing. The ones I see more often are a stand which is meant to be permanently mounted to a workbench, with interchangeable feet. I've never seen one with multiple feet like that; I can see the advantages especially if you're not working in a permanent shop.
@raydunakin3 ай бұрын
The locking mechanism on those old handcuffs is pretty clever.
@melindacaputo89172 ай бұрын
Ha ha the end is so Adam with the tools just clanging round. Love it
@DanielCook-h6r3 ай бұрын
Excellent peak Adam rummaging noises in the outtake. Dude can rummage like no other. Professional rummager. Rummagist? Rummaestro?
@landmarkconstruction3 ай бұрын
Wow My back Yard!!!! Its funny how many famous people come to Massachusetts for vacation!!!! On top of sharing the same birthday now you com to vacation here.....Adam I am 47 and I do look up to you. Love watching you, you look like super good people!
@Shady8993 ай бұрын
This was such a wonderful video!! Please do more of these hauls from any future vacations. Such a joy to see item after another when I thought it was the end.
@JustinMiales3 ай бұрын
We used to go to Cape Cod in the off-season every year when I was a child and 60s and 70s, my dad rented Cottage on the beach and we went fishing off the pier at the point of Cape, friends back a lot of great memories.
@garydargan63 ай бұрын
The most unusual hammer I came across was a small hammer with a square and pointed end with a slender handle with 10cm graduations and a spiked cap on the end. The metric graduation were supplemented by hand cut grooves for imperial measurements. The key to understanding it's use was that the metal parts were bronze. It was a mine captains hammer used for tappin walls and roof in mines to look for weaknesses and the gradation were used to measure shot hole depths. The metal was bronze because it wouldn't spark when struck.
@jordan.7Ай бұрын
I like the part at 1:30 where you said "wait right there" as if we, the viewer, were really right in front of you. It remained of the way Mr. Rogers talked to the viewer as if they were in the room with him.
@craigt662713 ай бұрын
I think #4 is a bodyshop tool. Fairmont makes a lot of different body tools
@burninpwder763 ай бұрын
Yep Hammer is a Fairmont body panel hammer. Fellow i worked for at a junkyard had a long handled one identical to that for reaching in behind long panels and tapping out dents or using it as a backup behind the panel and tapping with another flat faced hammer outside. And I do remember a tool very close to the one you have there hanging in an old icehouse for breaking chunks off the block ice
@iandeare13 ай бұрын
The handcuffs, colloquially called Derby's, were used in the UK, and it's colonies, unchanged, for over 200 years. My father's were standard Police uniform issue (in his case 1951) until he retired from the force in the early '70's. The more recognisable flat pressed steel Hyatt type were being issued at that point (if UK issue, they will have a date, and proof like markings, stamped on them) The form, and fit, immediately tells you if they're real. I got into a heated debate with one of your fellow countrymen once, about this, who insisted his were real. I fruitlessly tried to explain; until a few years ago these were still being hand made in Birmingham, England, by Craftsmen, who took pride, and would never let anything as crude as his example out of their workshops!
@enchantedwooddesigns34623 ай бұрын
My great aunts house was old square logs cabin and added rooms from 40's on the family farm in middle of no where West Virginia. In the cupboard or smoke house they had the cast iron shoe pieces that you could change sizes in a notch on top of the standing base.
@GavinHaydam3 ай бұрын
Hey Adam, I have an idea for a 1 day build, you should do a HO gauge train layout.
@GavinHaydam3 ай бұрын
8:36 it looks like it says Fairbocht 1659
@louisesegura97552 ай бұрын
The long hammer was used 60 or 70 years ago to test the wheels of a train. When tapping the steel wheel, the pinging noise could indicate if there were any cracks in the wheel. A Railroad Worker would tap each wheel and compare the pinging noises with one another. The two ends make different ping sounds and the operator can compare and see which wheel is defective. Similarly, a piece of pottery can be flicked with your finger to determine if there are cracks.
@AuntieRanna3 ай бұрын
I have two stapleless staplers that I bought within the last 5 to 10 years. I always thought they originated in Japan because of the Japanese mastery of all things related to stationery!
@jn98503 ай бұрын
Same!
@ph11p35403 ай бұрын
That tear drop hammer was likely used in an old car body shop for Frenching recessed headlights and other metal bezel work for some instrument panels. Similar hammers have also been used in medieval times to add highly sculptural raised pattern. This added beauty to the armor plate and increased it's rigidity and strength without adding weight. These are always custom one off tools and no two tear drop hammers are the same.
I haven't seen Adam do a lot of free hand metal shaping, so it wasn't immediately clear to him what the hammer was for - but if you've worked sheet metal, then you knew immediately this was a planishing/metal working hammer of some kind. Fun little tool.
@RossReedstrom3 ай бұрын
Planishing! I knew there was a special word for it: that includes using a dolly block on the other side, sometimes, right? Gotta keep the old words alive! (googling finds a macmaster-carr page under planishing hammers that also includes dolly blocks and dinging spoons. :) )
@KyleB_RCR83 ай бұрын
Liar's Club was a game show, featuring a panel of celebrity guests who offered explanations of obscure or unusual objects. Rod Serling was the original host. This reminds me of that show
@MFunkibut3 ай бұрын
+1 for Liar's Club. I think I watched the last version made; outta Detriot; mid 70s; came on about 1130am...
@RandyKuppless3 ай бұрын
The small yankee snow knocker was a tool hung from sleds to knock snow and ice from horse's hoofs, they were made by blacksmiths so no two are completely alike. Seen in Eric Sloane's book on early American tools, p82.
@RobCCTV3 ай бұрын
My dad had that tool at 11:00. We are Brits, in England. But he told me that it had been in the family for generations, and he thought that it was something to do with ROOFING with slates.
@daveylad23 ай бұрын
It’s a cobblers “shoe last” for repairing shoes
@wirelesmike733 ай бұрын
It's called an Ice Knocker, made from around 1850 - 1900 and was used all the way up until the 1920s - 30s when ice wagons began to go out of business as a result of the proliferation of home refrigeration. Wagons would go around town carrying large blocks of ice and smaller blocks would be cleaved off and sold by the pound to customers to put in their ice boxes.
@curtis76573 ай бұрын
Omg the outro clip is the gold
@MelroyvandenBerg3 ай бұрын
I hope he is still alive 😅
@woodgemdave3 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your over active mind, and it's great how much fun you're having and definitely taking time off, great life
@525medic3 ай бұрын
Auto body hammer. Long handle so you can use your other hand to hold the Dolly.
@ParrotHGH3 ай бұрын
That closing shot was amazing! Like out of a cartoon!
@steveeason22073 ай бұрын
Possibly a turn of the century mechanics hammer from when motor racing first started. the mechanic would sit next to the driver and fix things on the fly, whilst still in the moving car. I wonder, because of the long handle, if it was to tap something into place on the engine that may jump out of place whilst the car was running in the race?
@LunaticCharade3 ай бұрын
So your thinking is that they'd take the time and effort to make a really specific odd hammer to tap it in to place when in motion..? Instead of perhaps just screwing it down proper instead..?
@billpark89883 ай бұрын
Adam's enthusiasm is infectious! I share his appreciation for this he elegance of older tools. Oscar Wilde once said ( I think ) that he preferred women with a past and men with a future. In my case change the saying to ...tools with a past.
@roryoutdoors54313 ай бұрын
“Uhhhmmmm… excuse me… I believe you have my paper-puncher…”
@mattbishop93393 ай бұрын
On a related note, I purchased a red Swingline stapler solely because of Office Space - it is hands-down the best stapler I have ever used! I'm on Milton's side! 😂
@roryoutdoors54313 ай бұрын
@@mattbishop9339 me too, I was gifted mine though, left behind by a former desk occupant! Crazy. Chose not to burn the building down that day! Fun fact: no red swinglines were sold before the movie! The first version that came out retail has the logo on top (like mine) but more movie accurate it goes on the side 🤓
@ItsBugtronic3 ай бұрын
With my entire family living on Cape Cod, and my wife an absolute nut for flea markets and other stores of the like, it is amazing I have not seen you at the Sandwich Flea Market. Who knows however, maybe one day our paths may cross again. Thanks for sharing your most recent haul!
@edschultze5523 ай бұрын
Are you talking about Sandwich Flea Market on Quaker Meeting House Rd?
@ItsBugtronic3 ай бұрын
@@edschultze552 I think your right. My wife is the antiques hunter, I usually agree to be dragged along for the hopes of finding an old hand tool.
@dpastor66313 ай бұрын
A moral negative? If someone is dangerous and wanting to do harm to others and they need to be restrained or else they will hurt someone? That's a moral positive. Just sayin'
@Oblivionator1003 ай бұрын
I agree, on the other hand though, if you look at the size and scale of those shackles compared to Adam's wrists and hands, those were very likely child sized shackles, which is a fairly disturbing thought considering the time period they were likely made.
@joebonomono3 ай бұрын
I also enjoy buying weird random tools I dont recognize and understand, Ive done it all my life. One of my first was a shuttle from a loom which i still think is mechanically interesting and beautiful, it sits on my coffee table today reminding me of Americas past and the hard work we've knocked down and put behind us.
@OldZean3 ай бұрын
I've seen tools similar to the first. If you are off a profession where you have to pour a lot of cans you put the point on it, hit it with your hand so you create a second opening where air can get in. Speeds up the pouring of oils and such.
@SteveBrecht3 ай бұрын
Those handcuffs are known as Darby cuffs. I have an original set here as well. Always fascinated me the simplicity of the mechanism yet how well it achieved the design goal. And yes, the spinner in the middle is a nice addition.
@Bigrignohio3 ай бұрын
Wow, that clipless paper fastener brings back memories. Used one a lot back in the 80s-early 90's.
@jayerscios3 ай бұрын
I never used one but I, at first, I thought it was a hole puncher. Until I saw the mechanism and I figured it out. I remember doing this manually by folding the corner of papers making a small triangle. Then, ripping two vertical lines into the folded pieces. Then, folding the ripped bit onto the back of the papers.
@mrgoats3 ай бұрын
I was the discovery forums user who suggested testing the myth for Deadly Straw. I must have been 19 at the time. It seemed like you decided on the spot to test it as you responded with excitement. Did you and Jamie have the latitude to make episode decisions without much discussion? Seeing the episode come to fruition brought me a lot of joy,. Thank you. -Rick
@ry7hym2 күн бұрын
that metal thing that you grabbed at the very end after going through all that iron stuff, I have some of those as well. That is a shoe maker's anvil. My great grandfather was a shoemaker and me and my father own his old workshop with all of the tools
@SwassMike3 ай бұрын
Hahaha when I saw you grab the clipless paper fastener I got excited. I have several of them and similar devices including old staplers. Very cool engineering
@robertennor11433 ай бұрын
Great vid. Tracked down the Fairmount pretty quickly but went down the rabbit hole of auto body bashing Dollie’s and hammers in the process. Lovely industrial design journey. Weird tools with uncertain uses and exceptional design, is really appealing to me. Finding a purpose for me to use something like that is what I enjoy. Found a pry bar a couple of years ago. 18” long with one end tapered and the other with a pry hook. Just the tool to punch through garden landscape cloth to place bamboo or metal stakes for plant supports. Vintage forceps to separate or connect tiny things to other tiny things (like connecting/disconnecting turntable cartridges). Enjoyed your finds. Loving your ice hammer/cutter. R
@ohyeahforsure3 ай бұрын
Very strange, but heartening to hear you talking about the places I grew up!
@crossbow12033 ай бұрын
When you metal finished things like car roofs back in the 1950s and before you needed a long hammer to bump up low spots and then you used a body file to check the progress. My father was an old body man so this is old home week when I see a hammer like that!
@marklanders6303 ай бұрын
Growing up in Cotuit in the seventies my dad was a Barnstable cop. He had an old pair of handcuffs just like that at home and us kids would play with them, but we didn't have a key. Dick's flea market in Mashpee was always a fun day out during the summer and we would stop next door to play miniature golf afterwards.
@BobEllis793 ай бұрын
New England flea markets, etc are a great place for interesting old tools with all the history of industry, tool-making and innovation in the area
@adamglatt94843 ай бұрын
You, Sir, are a Very Special Person... so special that you have qualified times over to be referred to as a Mench... thank you I Wish You Well
@TrueNomadSkies3 ай бұрын
I love finding old tools that make me think about what they could be used for.
@earthknight603 ай бұрын
The ice hammer is almost certainly for dealing with blocks of ice for the home or business before refrigeration, not for bartending use. It looks a lot like a smaller version of an ice harvesting hammer/axe. The long thing hammer looks like it's for sheet metal working of some sort.
@Joel_Jacket3 ай бұрын
If you're ever in the area at the time, Massachusetts also has the Brimfield flea markets, which happen 3 times a year! Brimfield is (I think) New England's biggest flea market and its a great time! It specializes in more of antique collectables (like pottery), but they've got a bit of everything!
@Budaniel3 ай бұрын
Adam talking about having a vacation home on Cape Cod brings back good memories to the times I've stayed at vacation rental homes in South Orleans on the cape. Also, mentioning Falmouth reminds me of the town of Yarmouth, and the locals were quick to point out to us Mid-westerners that they weren't pronounced "foul mouth" and "you're mouth." 😅
@budgetmerch3 ай бұрын
I love ingenious devices like that paperclip thing. Brilliant!
@isustudent5143 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's cool to see clever gadgets like that and even funnier when they seem to be more complicated than the gadget that replaces them-- like a stapler in this case.
@BassSaxEnjoyer3 ай бұрын
Dude i would LOVE a show of adam savage just going to flea markets and garage sales.
@haugheymatt43813 ай бұрын
That's a 'Tom-draw' hammer from Fairmont. It was used to form/repair composite panels by coachbuilders. I mean composite in the older sense, as in the combining of 2 or more metal skin assemblies to create a larger whole sheet metal structure resistant stronger structurally and resistant to oil canning. The Tom-draw, or Tommy was used to access the interior volumes created by the composite form usually from a small port cut into the interior piece that would be plugged after the work was complete. Its long haft provided both reach to apply force and leverage using the port edge as a fulcrum, hence the heavy lower section of the haft to deal with the force and contact. Great find!
@noahnipperus73203 ай бұрын
4:50 This is the care and complexity i require from mentors ; addressing everything explicitly
@iainburgess85773 ай бұрын
1:45 (the "cobblers tool" from an old flea market) yes, its a cobblers tool; a "last". In this case, a solid, multi-head last. That one is probably for a fine shoemaker, travelling cobbler, or a street vendor; it's not big or heavy enough for work boots or heavier. Cobblers and shoe repairers use these like other trades use vices or clamps; its one of our main work surfaces. The are many specialty tools in shoe repair, even more for actual cobblers/shoemakers the steel or iron form is our third hand & workhorse; from disassembing shoes, cutting sewn soles, prying & pulling soles and heels, used to putting them together; usually w a -hammer tapping leather to settle seams or shape leather, hammering new soles to set the glue, nails in heels, tacks in soles (a tack has a needle point that is turned back a metal last.). This one is light; fine for moccasis, soft soled shoes, dress shoes. Anything where the leather sole and (back when) leather heel is built of thinner layers; the 1/8" or 3mm type of thing. But heavy and stiff leather any thicker would simply lift and shift that last; and anything up to 1/4 or 6mm is common for workwear, w many styles or special equipment being even thicker; tho thats nearly all rubber, foam or plastics today. I worked in my local shoe repair for almost a decade, until Fibromyalgia left ne unable to work.
@TheTrock1213 ай бұрын
I love working out designs in nonferrous metals and have around 30 hammers. I went to Ohio for the Eclipse a few months ago and found an old Fullering Hammer at an antique shop. Many times, older hand tools are better than new ones.
@Garblegox3 ай бұрын
My mom taught me how to fasten paper like that, only with a pair of scissors. That clipless paper fastener is so beautiful, because I've never seen the flap tucked back in to the paper like that.
@Dismythed3 ай бұрын
The long handle of the hammer seems to be for getting at places your arm can't fit or else reach in auto repair.The sharp tip may be for pinions or pins of some sort. The long handle, in that case, would assist in accuracy. Though it could be for a wide variety of purposes. A pointy hammer could be useful for breaking seals, pinching/crimping metal, etc.