Part of this material I used in the 20 hour granite course I taught at Pratt. Most of the info is from Tom Urban’s workshop at Camp Brotherhod, some from a workshop by Don Ramey that Hank Nelson organized at my place years ago. If you find anything useful, please add it to the article – Kirk
Pneumatic hammers
Sources:
Types:
- D (Dallet) long stroke 3/4 “, 1 inch. Used for removing lots of stone. More impact, vibration.
- B short stroke 1/2, 3/4, 1 inch. Less vibration, used for detail.
- Bantam-fine detail, lettering
- Many carvers use 3/4D, control impact by amount of air.
Air consumption:
- 4 CFM-1/2 & 3/4;
- 6 CFM-1”
- For 1″ hammer a whip connection (see photo)is recommended so as not to beat up the coupler. It is likely that once you put a whip on one then you’ll find yourself putting them on all.
- Control air flow to hammer with an adjustable valve (stop cock). Chose a valve handle that is small enough so as to not get caught on everything yet big enough to easily turn it without fumbling.
Chisel diameter:
- B & D take 1/2” shank,
- Bantam smaller. Many European chisels fit Bantam.
Bushing chisels:
- 4 pt square or 5pt round: stone removal
- 9 pt: stone removal, final shaping
- cup, criss-cross, axe: finish.
- Rippers, long 4 pt: Deeper carving. NOT used like toothed chisel.
- Criss-cross for cleaning up frets
Carving chisels:
- roughing have heavy profile, finishing a bit thinner.
- Limestone thinner and wide
- Granite requires carbide blade set into steel.
- Avoid wedge insert (marble blade), tends to pop out.
- DO NOT pry on chisel, let it do work.
Safety: Vibration, noise, dust & chips.
- Usual eye, hearing and breathing protection.
- Wear padded gloves, grip gently.
- DO NOT grip tightly, lean into stone.
- Take frequent breaks from work.
Air hammer care:
- If sticking soak in kerosene overnight.
- Or, add WD-40, run, then put in white spindle oil (10 SAE).
- Oil hammers before and after use.
- Run at low speed for minute before putting under load.
- Running hammer full speed without chisel can damage it.
ed Note: Videos at Trow&Holden provide Pneumatic Tool Basics and Getting Started.