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BIHUI One Piece Rubber Mallet

by BIHUI
SKU RMWS24
Original price $13.19 - Original price $13.19
Original price
$13.19
$13.19 - $13.19
Current price $13.19

Clean strikes, no marks, no loose head. The BIHUI One-Piece Rubber Mallet (24 oz) sets tile into mortar and seats click-lock flooring with controlled, surface-safe force — rubber faces protect tile edges and trim, while the one-piece body resists the loosening and failure that kill cheap mallets. Heavy enough to move material, light enough to swing all day.

More Details

A 24 oz one-piece rubber mallet for tile setting and finish work.

  • Weight: 24 oz — balanced for accurate, controlled strikes
  • Faces: Rubber striking faces apply force without chipping tile or marking finished surfaces
  • Build: One-piece body resists loosening and failure; reduced bounce
  • Use: Tapping tile into mortar, seating click-lock flooring, and general finish work
Shipping & Return Policies

BIHUI One Piece Rubber Mallet (24 oz) — Seat Tile Without Marking It

A loose-headed mallet or one with a marking face is a liability on finished tile — it bounces, it loosens, and it can scuff the surface. The BIHUI 24 oz one-piece rubber mallet avoids all of that. The balanced 24 oz weight gives you accurate, controlled strikes, and rubber faces apply force without chipping tile or marking finished surfaces.

A one-piece body resists loosening and failure and reduces bounce, so every tap lands where you mean it. It's built for tapping tile into mortar, seating, and finish work. For seating large-format tile across a wide face, pair it with the tile beater block.

Why Tile Pros Choose It

  • Controlled strikes: Balanced 24 oz weight for accuracy
  • Won't mark tile: Rubber faces apply force without chipping or scuffing
  • One-piece build: Resists loosening and failure
  • Less bounce: Every tap lands where you aim
  • Setting and finish: Taps tile into mortar and seats it solid

Pro tip: Tap with the weight of the mallet rather than swinging hard — you're seating tile, not driving nails. For big tile, work with a beater block so you spread the force and keep it off fragile edges.