3:46 big no no. Gun safety applies to powder actuated tools as well. Never put your nose pickers in front of the muzzle when the chamber has a cartridge in it. This tool, for all intents and purposes, is a gun that drives nails instead of bullets. If it can drive a nail 3/4 of the way through a 2x4, it can drive it straight through your finger. Bone included.
point it safety as that is a charged tool with a projectile. although the safety requires full compression of the tool. muzzle control should be adhered at all times. that Hilti was aimed towards the co worker. make adjustments then load action. that's how I was taught twenty years ago.
I was going to post the same. When she hands it to him, he points it at himself. Then, she charged the weapon while pointing it directly at the camera (and I assume a cameraperson is there.)
After drying and planing, the 2" by 4" is 1 1⁄2 in × 3 1⁄2 in (38 mm × 89 mm). Measure one and see for yourself. A 2" by 4" from 50-60yrs ago will be an actual 2" by 4", however.
Stephen Slampa The example shows an un-planed un-treated wood. Which would I believe measure 2x4. Plus I am an old fart now so probably remember the old days when if you asked for 2x4 you bloody got 2x4. hahaha
3:46 big no no. Gun safety applies to powder actuated tools as well. Never put your nose pickers in front of the muzzle when the chamber has a cartridge in it. This tool, for all intents and purposes, is a gun that drives nails instead of bullets. If it can drive a nail 3/4 of the way through a 2x4, it can drive it straight through your finger. Bone included.
2:35 Attach the Tubafor to the concrete
Thats the code
point it safety as that is a charged tool with a projectile. although the safety requires full compression of the tool. muzzle control should be adhered at all times. that Hilti was aimed towards the co worker. make adjustments then load action. that's how I was taught twenty years ago.
I was going to post the same. When she hands it to him, he points it at himself. Then, she charged the weapon while pointing it directly at the camera (and I assume a cameraperson is there.)
Very well explained!
once long time ago i had to use one of these babies all day long to hammer fastening into steel beams. the recoil numbs the hands.
My adventure with woodworking started with Woodglut.
I might be missing something here, but I do believe a 2" by 4" is called that because its NOT 1 1/2"s thick.
After drying and planing, the 2" by 4" is 1 1⁄2 in × 3 1⁄2 in (38 mm × 89 mm). Measure one and see for yourself.
A 2" by 4" from 50-60yrs ago will be an actual 2" by 4", however.
Stephen Slampa The example shows an un-planed un-treated wood. Which would I believe measure 2x4. Plus I am an old fart now so probably remember the old days when if you asked for 2x4 you bloody got 2x4. hahaha
It is a conventional, nominal 2x4 with actual dimensions reduced .5 inch.
jonathan dempsey hahah lowes has a number of displays that you can measure