part of claw hammer that strikes the head of the nail
The parts are the shaft and the head.
claw hammer
the head with a face and a claw, the shaft with a handle/grip.
The claw hammer can not only hammer a nail into wood but can , by way of the claw , grasp the head of the nail and be used to pry/leverage the nail from wood .
On a standard claw hammer you have the head which consists of the face for driving nails, and a claw for removing nails. The head of the hammer is attached to a handle or shaft to give it leverage.
The claw part of the hammer is used to lever up and remove nails.
The function of a claw hammer is so that you can efficiently pull or lever out nails that went cactus on you when you were trying to hammer it in.
The function of a claw hammer is so that you can efficiently pull or lever out nails that went cactus on you when you were trying to hammer it in.
The part of a hammer that uses leverage to remove nails is the 'claw', usually located on the back of the hammer. The 'face' is the front of the hammer used to drive nails.
A hammer or a claw hammer, the 'claw' is used to pull out unwanted or bent nails.
A claw hammer is used mainly for hammering in large nails in construction work. It's claw is for straightening or pulling nails out.
Um.. a hammer? Or a lever.