Also of interest is a finish nailer if one is trying to do thicker wood. General rule of thumb that I read somewhere is that use nails that are 2x of the wood that you are piercing. For example, 5/8th sheet rock + 5/8” thick trim would require you to use 2.5” nails (use finish nailer for this).
I tried a Milwaukee 18ga M18 (battery power) it was convenient as heck, but it weighed a ton. About equivalent to a pneumatic framing nailer. My little 18ga Senco (air) is about as heavy as an iphone.
Great video, really easy to watch and listen to. Thank you from the UK.
Exactly what I needed to learn more..the exact question I’ve had and been searching for!! Thank you for representing!!! 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼❤️💪🏼💪🏼🥹🥹🥰❤️❤️
Thank you for sharing this breakdown!
Also of interest is a finish nailer if one is trying to do thicker wood. General rule of thumb that I read somewhere is that use nails that are 2x of the wood that you are piercing. For example, 5/8th sheet rock + 5/8” thick trim would require you to use 2.5” nails (use finish nailer for this).
Thank you for the information 💯
Super informative thank you so much
I tried a Milwaukee 18ga M18 (battery power) it was convenient as heck, but it weighed a ton. About equivalent to a pneumatic framing nailer. My little 18ga Senco (air) is about as heavy as an iphone.
What happened to the traditional nails with a flat circular top? Are there tools for them?
You can use those with a hammer but you’ll see the nail head. It will ask take longer but it’s doable
So the nail go through the boards and into the dry wall? What about concrete?
We don’t have concrete walls here
How do you remove the nail if you make a mistake?
It’s hard. You have to take the piece of wood off usually
Which one machine u use to fix wood panel
I would use the brad nailer because the nails are stronger to hold wood together
👍👍