In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

Maul Handle Replacement

Discussion in 'Axes, Mauls, and Hand Saws' started by Burnin Since 1991, Nov 28, 2025.

  1. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    I have a TrueTemper 6lb maul I bought in 1991 that I wore out the handle on. I went to the local hardware store and grabbed a maul handle. When I looked a bit closer at my maul head I realized it needed an oval handle like would fit a sledge hammer. I went back to the store and found the right handle but it is slightly too big for the opening in my maul head. The shape of the handle looks perfect, but just too big. The handle is Hickory.

    What would be the easiest way to get that handle small enough to fit? Pics in the morning.

    Thanks for your input!
     
  2. Woodtroll

    Woodtroll

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    Sharp hand tools (knives and rasps) are the traditional way. Drawknives and spokeshaves work well too and I use them on lots of things, but they are not common items these days. About 10 years ago I started using a cheap (like $12 on sale) Harbor Freight 4-1/2" hand grinder with a cheap ($3-4) flap sanding disk. About 80 grit works well, but 36 or 100 would work, depending on how much speed vs. control you want. The thing I like about this setup is that it's cheap, is handy for working on everything from wood items to boot soles, and is easy to control. You can sand very fine amounts easily with a light touch and get a nice fit.

    Good luck!
     
  3. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    You made me think about when I was a kid and my dads workbench in the basement. He was a finish carpenter/ cabinet maker before all the pre-fab stuff forced him into other work. He had every hand tool you could imagine.

    I have a harbor freight angle grinder. I will have to look and see if I have any flap discs. If not I can get some easy enough. Good call!

    Thanks much!
     
  4. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    I have used an angle grinder with a standard grinding wheel too.
    Also, a bench grinder...both worked fine...the key is to take your time and not take too much material off at once...grind, trial fit, grind, trial fit, grind...
     
  5. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    It's going to be a bit awkward for me since I don't have a vise. I ordered some flap discs as I need them anyway. I might try a combination of both. Use the grinding wheel to get it close then the flap disc to clean it up and finish it off. We'll see as I plan to start fooling with it today. I need my maul to do some splitting.
     
  6. Woodtroll

    Woodtroll

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    I do mine sitting, holding the handle across my lap with my left hand, with light strokes with my right moving away (towards the head end of the handle), sort of a brushing/sweeping motion. You just roll the handle with your left hand as you work around it. That's a lot faster and more natural than constantly repositioning in the vise, and it makes it easy to take small amounts at a time. Try it a few times with the grinder off to get a feel for the motion.
     
  7. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    The maul handle got postponed to Monday. I will try that technique sounds like the easiest way.
     
  8. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    Have you considered buying a new maul? I'd recommend the Fiskars Isocore. Popular model among many FHCers.
     
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2025
  9. RGrant

    RGrant

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  10. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    Yes Sir, I have and I handled the isocore while I was in getting the new handle. There's one definitely in my future. I've had the old maul since I bought my woodstove and it has split a lot of wood. Sentimental reasons more than anything. One lesson my Dad passed on to me was properly caring for your tools and I feel obligated to fix it. :axe:Once it's fixed up I will watch and see if I can catch one on sale.
     
  11. David McIntyre

    David McIntyre

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    Personally, I like to use a draw knife for handle fitting.
     
  12. T.Jeff Veal

    T.Jeff Veal

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    Those are good too, if he has one. But would be hard for him to use since he doesn't have a vise.
    Welcome to the club, lot's of great folks here sharing knowledge and humor.
    :handshake:
     
  13. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    my Dad had a draw knife, but I think it went at the estate sale. I still haven't done the handle. Still looking for my round tuit. I must have misplaced it.
     
  14. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    Here ya go...this must be yours
    upload_2025-12-31_16-49-49.jpeg
     
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  15. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    oh crud, now what am I going to do?:faint:
     
  16. davidwyby

    davidwyby

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    I’m not real big on the iso


    Anyone tried this? A guy on Reddit said it’s his bet splitter. I like the idea.
    Gorilla Splitting Mauls
     
  17. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    I have not. Looks like a decent maul though. Give it a shot and let us know.
     
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  18. RGrant

    RGrant

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    I didn't care the the Iso Maul either. I either bought it myself or was gifted one, and it lasted 1 season. The head had a hairline crack through it at the through bolt, I felt like I couldn't trust it and didn't feel like worrying about it again in the future if I warrantied it.
    The Gorilla Maul looks a lot like the Collins design. Not good / bad or indifferent.

    I threw down money on this Wilton Tools Maul 8 Pound. Not pretty, but neither am I. I love it.
     
  19. davidwyby

    davidwyby

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    I haven’t found a synthetic handle I like yet.

    I like that the Wilton is convex vs. concave. The iso gets stuck too much. I’d have to sharpen up the leading edge of the Wilton or I’d get bounce/shock in my concrete wood.
     
  20. RGrant

    RGrant

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    Like most of us the only way to do it is to over do it.. I've got more axes / mauls / wedges and sledges than I have life in my lower back. I mostly use my small Boss splitter.