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Sign In Register Forgot User ID? Forgot Password?Axes, Machetes, Hooks & Wedges
7 products
Axes, machetes, hooks, and wedges use their sharp edges to cut wood, brush, and other growth. Axes drive their wedged blade into wood to fell trees, remove branches, and split logs. Machetes use their long, broad blade to clear undergrowth, slice through stalks and stems, and remove twigs and small branches. Brush hooks and ditch bank blades have hooked blades that grab and slice through dense brush, vines, and undergrowth. Wedges split wood along its grain to create firewood or split large logs into smaller pieces.
Brand
Machetes
The long, broad blade of machetes clears undergrowth to maintain paths, slices through stalks and stems to harvest crops, and removes twigs and small branches. Their short handle allows one-handed control to wield the blade, leaving the other hand free to stabilize or gather materials being cut.
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General Purpose Axes
Axes drive their wedged blade into wood to fell trees, remove branches, and split logs. They have a single-bit head attached at a right angle to a long handle. Axes require two hands to swing and maximize their striking force.
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Splitting Mauls
The extra-long handle of these splitting mauls increases their swing arc to drive their thick, heavy head downward with greater force than a general purpose axe. Also called sledge-eye mauls, they have a cutting bit on one end and a striking face on the other end. The bit cuts like an axe head and the face drives splitting wedges into wood to split along the grain.
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Splitting Wedges
Splitting wedges cleave wood along its grain to create firewood or split large logs into smaller pieces to ease transport. These triangular tools taper from a thick, flat end to a thin, sharp edge. Striking the flat end with a maul or hammer drives the sharp edge into the wood to split it.
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Hammer Hatchets
The dual-purpose head on hammer hatchets has a flat face for striking and an axe bit for chopping. Also called roofing axes, they are commonly used in demolition, construction, and by roofers to hammer in nails and cut shingles.
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