Deck Sounding ,,, I know I know ,,, but explain anyway
Richard,
Strange you should bring that up.
A client had been attempting the same thing. He had lost at least an
half dozen before he saw my hammer. He had been standing on the deck
playing "drop and catch". The sound places were not a problem, but the
really soft places would cause so little rebound that he could not field
the ball and it would often escape. He was also have some accuracy
issues.
The hammer can give very readable response both visual and tactile, and
the hammer can do as well on surfaces that are far from horizontal or
significantly curved.
But - Hey - Whatever floats Your Boat - So to Speak
Matt Colie
Richard J Kinch wrote:
Matt Colie writes:
I use a two sided soft face hammer from Sears.
Have you ever tried dropping a golf ball? Gives you a visually
quantitative response.
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