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Club style mallet - PEP BB roundwood.sand.club

BB round wood woodworking - sand badge
 
master gardener
Posts: 4249
Location: Upstate NY, Zone 5, 43 inch Avg. Rainfall
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Minimum requirements:
  - roughly 16" long and 4" diameter at the fat end
  - handle that you can comfortably hold
  - handle is smooth enough that you won't get a splinter using it
  - made with hand tools only

To document this Badge Bit, provide proof of the following as pictures or a video (<2 mins):

  - Your chunk of wood that you are starting with (about 16 inches long and 4 inches in diameter)
  - progress about half way through, with the hand tools you have decided to use for this
  - final product held in your hand showing that your thumb and first finger can touch (any fatter than that and your hand will get very tired using it)


So everything went wrong with this BB when it came to prep. My draw knife is in my shed which is packed tight for the winter... Along with my hatchets.


I used a wood carving knife and a tomahawk to complete this BB. I had to get over worrying about taking too much wood because taking only small pieces was taking forever. Once I started swinging, the handle came together really quick.
Bonker1.jpg
Piece of a Box Elder
Piece of a Box Elder
Bonker2.jpg
Width
Width
Bonker3.jpg
Debarked
Debarked
Bonker4.jpg
Hawk is 22"
Hawk is 22"
Bonker5.jpg
The Bonker 5000
The Bonker 5000
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone approved this submission.

 
Posts: 82
Location: Shenandoah Valley (Virginia) Zone 6b
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Took me about two hours to make this mallet—including sawing the chunk of wood from a cut branch we brought down a couple of weeks ago, shaving off the bark with a hatchet, chiseling the handle out, smoothing it with a pocket knife, and then sanding the handle.

Ah well, never done this before.

I made myself a stand / holder with two concrete blocks, so I could sit on a low chair to work and also so the blocks would hold the mallet while I held the chisel with one hand and my (bought) mallet with the other. Without that, it would have taken me a lot longer.

Also, I checked that all the tools were sharp before I started using them.

Next time, I wouldn’t be afraid to take off bigger chunks of the handle with the chisel. My hand is pretty small, so it would have gone faster if I’d been less delicate at this stage.
D9E982FA-A3FD-40CD-8E96-1039CFECA173.jpeg
section sawn from branch
section sawn from branch
33D50155-BC06-4AC7-AC43-FCF3C0451DFA.jpeg
debarking with hatchet
debarking with hatchet
5520BD32-3EC6-469F-9E2D-24FEED9851C2.jpeg
sawing where handle ends
sawing where handle ends
4435A9CC-D75A-4515-A1D1-33689D01A9B6.jpeg
chiseling handle
chiseling handle
BA60F392-BB17-46E2-8DC1-64ADCDD164AE.jpeg
smoothing with knife
smoothing with knife
82D3E7AF-F6D8-4707-A4B2-B1DF250BD718.jpeg
wedged with other mallet to sand handle
wedged with other mallet to sand handle
374C716F-74B6-46CD-9CA8-C79986CD94E2.jpeg
finished mallet
finished mallet
F5D5BA09-DFE8-48DA-924D-7861FEC2D362.jpeg
tools I used
tools I used
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone approved this submission.
Note: This BB is complete!

 
Posts: 1
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Had a white oak fall due to a storm and decided to make use of the windfall. Started with a hatchet, switched to an axe. Then, after the handle was roughed out, switched to a knife. Finally, I cut off the excess with my bow saw.
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Timothy Norton approved this submission.

 
pollinator
Posts: 245
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I used a length of a cottonwood branch that went down in a storm and my hatchet.

First time making something like this with a hatchet- I found it to be kinda fun.

I have small hands and wanted a 2 handed mallet so I left the handle good and long.
20240309_101416.jpg
green cottonwood
green cottonwood
20240309_110350.jpg
super long lol
super long lol
20240309_110251.jpg
about 4" after the thick bark and easily peeled layer are off
about 4" after the thick bark and easily peeled layer are off
20240309_103507.jpg
getting the hang of it!
getting the hang of it!
20240309_124545.jpg
small enough handle for my hands to control
small enough handle for my hands to control
20240309_124601.jpg
other end of the long handle is small enough as well
other end of the long handle is small enough as well
Staff note (gir bot) :

Paul Fookes approved this submission.
Note: I certify this BB complete.  Well done

 
Apprentice Rocket Scientist
Posts: 853
Location: 4a, high mountain dessert
410
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I made a club out of a fallen cottonwood tree, using a saw, chisel, and hammer. I used a little sand paper at the end to smoother the handle and a couple burs in the head of the mallet.
20240605_203403.jpg
18+ inches long
18+ inches long
20240605_203416.jpg
More than 4 inches wide
More than 4 inches wide
20240606_152954.jpg
About halfway through
About halfway through
20240606_162710.jpg
Finished mallet, with a skinny enough grip that I can touch thumb and finger around it
Finished mallet, with a skinny enough grip that I can touch thumb and finger around it
Staff note (gir bot) :

Jeremy VanGelder approved this submission.

 
gardener
Posts: 416
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My club mallet is just over 16in long and 4in in diameter at the fat end. I opted for a tapered transition and took a lot of material off given that I'm a petite person and I wanted it to feel balanced.

Attachment 1    - Your chunk of wood that you are starting with (about 16 inches long and 4 inches in diameter)
Attachment 2    - progress about half way through, with the hand tools you have decided to use for this
Attachment 3    - final product held in your hand showing that your thumb and first finger can touch (any fatter than that and your hand will get very tired using it)
Attachment-1_roundwood_mallet_starting-wood-chunk-with-dimensions.jpg
[Thumbnail for Attachment-1_roundwood_mallet_starting-wood-chunk-with-dimensions.jpg]
Attachment-2_roundwood_mallet_halfway-progress-with-tools.jpg
[Thumbnail for Attachment-2_roundwood_mallet_halfway-progress-with-tools.jpg]
Attachment-3_roundwood_mallet_final-product-in-hand.JPG
[Thumbnail for Attachment-3_roundwood_mallet_final-product-in-hand.JPG]
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone approved this submission.

 
Posts: 25
Location: Colorado Springs
4
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Using a piece of pine that is roughly 16" long and 4" diameter at the fat end, and using hand tools only, I made my first club mallet at Wheaton labs. No splinters and can hold quite comfortably due to the weight not being so heavy for my small hands.
   

   
Starting-wood-used-for-Hand-Mallet-roughly-16-inches.jpg
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Hand-Mallet-Diameter.jpg
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Finished-hand-mallet.jpg
[Thumbnail for Finished-hand-mallet.jpg]
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone approved this submission.

 
pollinator
Posts: 298
Location: Boise, ID
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I went back to the lab for my own bb themed SEPPer weekend, first thing I knocked out was this mallet :)
IMG_0230.jpeg
Chunk of wood
Chunk of wood
IMG_0231.jpeg
16” long
16” long
IMG_0232.jpeg
4” diameter
4” diameter
IMG_0233.jpeg
Cutting a slice with the saw
Cutting a slice with the saw
IMG_0234.jpeg
Splitting with a froe
Splitting with a froe
IMG_0237.jpeg
Touching up with an axe
Touching up with an axe
IMG_0238.jpeg
Peeling on the shaving horse with a draw knife
Peeling on the shaving horse with a draw knife
IMG_0240.jpeg
Sanding that annoying knot
Sanding that annoying knot
IMG_0244.jpeg
Tada!!
Tada!!
Staff note (gir bot) :

Aaron Yarbrough approved this submission.
Note: Looks great!

 
Posts: 46
Location: Spain
10
cat trees homestead
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I was splitting firewood the other day and whenever my axe got stuck in the wood, I hit it with another piece of wood from a thick branch to finish the split. The makeshift club was not heavy and I thought to myself how silly it is to make my life harder.
I remembered this BB and found it to be the perfect time to make a club style mallet. It's nice and heavy and finishing splits is a lot easier!

Excuse the metric system on the measuring tape, the mallet measures 50cm in length, which is around  19".

Tools used:
- Bow saw
- Hatched
- Small axe
- Drawknife
- Measuring tape
wood-to-start-with.jpg
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cut-starter-wood-with-handtools.jpg
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mid-process-cutting-handle.jpg
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smoothing-handle-with-draw-knife.jpg
[Thumbnail for smoothing-handle-with-draw-knife.jpg]
a-mallet.jpg
[Thumbnail for a-mallet.jpg]
Staff note (gir bot) :

James Alun approved this submission.
Note: Metric is good according to this Brit!

 
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