There is a paper entitled “Reproducible SPT Hammer Impact Force with an Automatic Free Fall SPT Hammer System,” authored by Charles O. Riggs, Norbert O. Schmidt, and Charles L. Rassieur, published in ‘Geotechnical Testing Journal’ December 1983. Two of the three authors being from CME. It appears that a goal of the paper was to sell the automatic hammer on its consistent operation by backing up the claim with some technical info…seems reasonable.
The research found that a manual safety hammer (with 2 wraps around the cathead) delivered practically the same energy to the rods as the automatic hammer. Allow me to qualify that; most of the drill rig operators consistently “overpulled” the rope resulting in a slightly higher drop height. This partially explains why the energies may have measured out to be near the same.
The COV of energy delivered by the automatic hammer was indeed found to be low, on the order of 1 to 2%, while the manual hammer COV was higher as you’d expect. The Authors State that the raw N values obtained with the automatic hammer can normally be taken as the lower limit of the values you’d obtain by using a manual safety hammer, which makes sense. It appears, however, that they had some problems with some of the electronics used for energy measurement for some of the tests. All in all, they give some good information on the subject.