Warwood Tool Company P.O
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WARWOOD TOOL COMPANY P.O. Box 6357 164 North 19th Street (26003-7064) WHEELING, WEST VIRGINIA 26003-0614 Toll Free 1-877-687-1410 Tel. (304) 277-1414 Fax. (304) 277-1420 E-Mail [email protected] Web Page warwoodtool.com CATALOG (Forged Steel Tools) ADZES GARDEN TOOLS MAULS SLEDGES BARS HAMMERS PICKS TONGS CHISELS HOES BULL PINS WEDGES DRIFT PINS MATTOCKS PUNCHES WRENCHES MANHOLE COVER LIFTERS RAILROAD TRACK TOOLS IMPORTANT NOTICE Need help in quoting tools to any U.S. Government Agencies or The General Service Administration from “CID’s” 5110 or 5120 Numbers? Need help in quoting Railroad Track Tools to A.R.E.M.A. (American Railway Engineering and Maintenance of Way), formerly A.R.E.A.? VISIT OUR WARWOOD TOOL COMPANY WEB PAGE warwoodtool.com Catalog No. 2008 WARWOOD TOOL COMPANY PROTECT YOUR EYES WEAR SAFETY GOGGLES OSHA Regulations 29 CFR 1910.133 requires the use of eye protection not only to workers using striking tools, but to nearby workers in the immediate work area. Similar requirements are contained in OSHA Construction Standards 29 CFR 1926.102. Mine Safety and Health Administrationn requires eye protection in the Mining environment 30 CFR 55.14-4, 30 CFR 56-15-4, 30 CFR 57-15-4, 30 CFR 75.1720(a) and 30 CFR 77.1710(a). GENERAL TERMS ALL PREVIOUS QUOTATIONS AND PRICE LISTS ARE HEREBY WITHDRAWN AND AND CONSIDERED NULL AND VOID. CONDITIONS Payment Terms: 2% discount, 15 days from date of invoice, net 30 days. Past due accounts will be subject to a service charge of 11/2% per month. Shipping Terms: Full freight will be allowed on shipments of 1,000 lbs. or more to any point in the Continental United States. Warwood Tool reserves the right to ship via the least expensive route. Minimum Invoice Charge: Our minimum order and invoice charge is $75.00 or a $5.00 service fee is added to invoice. Returned Goods: No merchandise is to be returned without Warwood Authorization. Returned goods, when authorized, must be returned prepaid freight. Credit will be issued at invoice price at time of shipment less 15% restocking charge, plus cost of initial outgoing freight. If it is necessary to recondition or repackage returned goods, additional charges will be assessed. Credit for returned goods may be applied only toward the purchase of other Warwood products. Credits cannot be applied for cash rebates. Shortage or Damage: In the event of any shortage or damages, notify at once the delivery transportation agent. File claim properly and be certain all shortage and damaged goods are signed and noted on the freight bill at the time of delivery. Losses and damages which occur in transit are the carrier’s responsibility, and such claims should be filed promptly with the carrier. Packaging: We request that you purchase all items according to our catalog packaging schedule. Items not ordered according to our packaging schedule will be increased to the next higher package schedule. Disclaimer: Warwood Tool Company makes no warranty, express, implied or statutory, including any implied warranty of merchantability and/or fitness for any particular purpose, with respect to any of its tools. In addition, Warwood Tool Company shall not be liable for any damages arising out of or occasioned by the selection, application, use or opera- tion of its tools. Specifications: Specifications and plans in this catalog include those published by the American National Standards Institute, Inc. (A.N.S.I.) and/or AREMA American Railway Engineering Maintenance of Way Association (A.R.E.A.) or AREMA and/or Federal Specifications and/or the United States Department of Commerce Simplified Practice Recommendations (heavy forged hand tools) unless otherwise specified. If ordering to American Railway Engineering Association Specifications designate AREA or AREMA Plan, Type and Grade of steel desired. Warwood Tool Company highly recommends using current AREMA Specifications when possible. Warwood Finish: Most Warwood carbon steel tools, unless otherwise requested, are painted blue. Warwood regular alloy tools are stamped “Alloy” and painted blue. Railroad Track Tools will be furnished per designated AREA Specifications which could be painted or unpainted depending on the year and AREA Plan or AREMA specified. Made in the U.S.A. Blacksmiths’ or Engineers’ mits heavy blows with limited Hammers and Sledges, swing – especially advantageous in restricted working areas. Double Face ABUSE/MISUSE. NEVER use HEAVY DESCRIPTION. This is the most these tools for sledging or stone commonly used type of sledge work. STRIKING hammer and is made in slightly different head configurations. All patterns have crowned striking Stone Sledges and TOOLS faces with beveled edges. Spalling Hammers PROPER USES. Sledges are designed for general sledging DESCRIPTION. These are stone operations in striking wood, masons’ tools. The sledge INTRODUCTION. Striking and metal, concrete or stone. Com- usually has a crowned, oval struck tools are made in various mon uses are drifting heavy tim- striking face with a napping face types and sizes with varying bers and striking spikes, cold opposite. The spalling hammer degrees of hardness and differ- chisels, rock drills and hardened has a beveled striking face. ent configurations for specific nails, and wood splitting wedges. PROPER USES. Stone sledges purposes. They should be ABUSE/MISUSE. NEVER use a are designed for breaking up selected for their intended use sledge to strike a hammer, stone and concrete. The spalling and used only for those pur- sledge, or maul. NEVER use a hammers are designed for cutting poses. Proper use of practically sledge with a loose or damaged and shaping stone and concrete. all types involves certain basic handle. The pein ends of stone sledges rules: and spalling hammers are (1)Always wear safety gog- intended specifically for gles when using striking Woodchoppers’ Mauls making score lines in stone and or struck tools, or when masonary. near someone else who is DESCRIPTION. Woodchoppers’ ABUSE/MISUSE. NEVER use doing so. mauls have a round, bevel-edged these tools for striking metal. (2)A hammer blow should striking face with a splitting edge NEVER use pein ends of stone always be struck squarely opposite. sledges or spalling hammers for with the hammer striking PROPER USES. These tools are breaking up stone or masonary. face parallel with the sur- designed for splitting wood. Also, They are for marking and scoring face being struck. Always they are used in conjunction with purposes only. avoid glancing blows and wood splitting wedges by first over and under strikes. making a notch with the splitting (3)The striking face of the edge and then driving the wedge Blacksmiths’ Hand hammer should have a with the maul’s Hammers and Cross Pein diameter approximately striking face. 3/8" larger than the struck ABUSE/MISUSE. NEVER use Sledges face of the tool. this tool in striking concrete. DESCRIPTION. These heavy- (4)Never use one hammer to NEVER drive one maul by strik- duty hammers are designed for strike another hammer. ing it with another maul, sledge use in striking metal. Striking (5)Never use a striking or or other striking tool. face is crowned with beveled struck tool with loose or edge. damaged handle. PROPER USES. The striking (6)Discard any striking or Hand Drilling Hammers face is designed for general struck tool if tool shows DESCRIPTION. These heavy, blacksmith work in striking dents, cracks, chips, short-handled hammers are unhardened metal. The peins are mushrooming, or exces- made in slightly varying config- used for shaping (fullering) and sive wear. urations. The double-faced head bending unhardened metal. (7)Never redress striking has crowned and beveled ABUSE/MISUSE. NEVER use a tools. Cutting edges of striking faces. sledge to strike a hammer, struck tools may be PROPER USES. These hammers sledge or maul. returned to the original are designed for use with shape with a file or chisels, punches, star drills and PROTECT YOUR whetstone. hardened nails. Their design per- EYES . When using . or in a striking tool zone Wear Safety Goggles 1 the cutting edge or bit is wider Proper Use – Abuse/Misuse and the blade is thinner. Of Railroad Track Tools ABUSE/MISUSE. NEVER use hot chisels for cutting cold metal, All railroad track tools, including stone or concrete. NEVER use a Hot Cutters, Track Chisels, Crow STRUCK dull chisel or one with a mush- Bars, Sledges, Picks, Spike roomed head. If cutting edge is Mauls, Spike Pullers and dull it may be redressed. Wrenches have a specific use for TOOLS a specific job. Such tools are not to be abused Cold Chisels and are not to be used for pur- poses other than their intended PROPER USES. Cold chisels use. For example, railroad spike have a cutting edge at one end INTRODUCTION. The striking mauls are specifically intended and struck faces of tools are for cutting, shaping and remov- to be used for driving railroad ing metal softer than the cutting designed to direct the force of spikes only. Do not use a spike edge itself and a struck face on blows toward the center or body maul for grouser pin installation the opposite end. of the tool. Blows struck off cen- or removal. Uses of railroad track NEVER use ter are not directed toward the ABUSE/MISUSE. tools for other than their cold chisels for cutting or split- body of the tool where they can intended use can result in ting stone or concrete. NEVER be absorbed, but rather travel serious bodily injury. use a dull chisel or one with a directly along the sides of the mushroomed head. Tools should be inspected before tool where there is insufficient being used. Discard any striking back-up material. The net effect or struck tool immediately at the is shearing rather than cushion- first sign of chipping, mushroom- ing which is dangerous.