I have both of these nail guns and I absolutely love them!!! but I still use pneumatic nail guns it certain applications if you can afford to upgrade to the battery operated trim guns I highly recommend it. If not you should definitely look into buying the pneumatic versions of these guns . I actually have them both battery operated and pneumatic They are amazing guns and have been engineered with a brand new technology I believe it’s called smart point or fine point technology. This technology and these guns are the most user-friendly and reliable trim guns I have ever shot. Even the angled gun shoots every single time and anyone that has used a angled trim gun knows that they are not the most reliable when it comes to pulling the trigger and expecting a nail to shoot out!
There is nothing new about smart point technology. Bostitch has been using it for quite some time on their phnumatic line. Bostitch and dewalt owned by same company so the technology was transferred over. If you want pneumatic dewalt isn’t too of the line. Bostitch And hitachi blow it out the water. Battery operated though dewalt and hitachi are the only contenders.
John Davidson well boating and dewalt battery nailer are 100 percent the same except for battery. What would you rather have a battery for one tool? Or a dewalt battery that could fit a lot of tools.
Man I absolutely love the detailed explanations provided. So often professionals forget to go into detailed explanations because it's so second nature to them. For a newbie, like myself, your talks are very informative/helpful.You're a natural teacher. Thanks so much for your videos. Keep them coming!
Don’t laugh me out of the comments but don’t sleep on the ryobi’s I have the 18 and narrow crown stapler and they work great especially for almost a half the price of Milwaukee or default. They just don’t make a framing gun
I like the Ryobi. I also have a larger gauge DeWalt, but I pick the Ryobi every time. Less fatigue due to less recoil, lighter, more quiet and better faster operation. Smaller gauge nails means smaller holes to patch up.
My 18 gauge ryobi have been probably the best $150 I've spent. I usually do light stuff though. About to buy a 16gauge ryobi also and then a dewalt framing. Battery powered all the way
Which gun you should buy depends on what you do for a living and your budget. For the homeowner/diyer on a limited budget I recommend getting a pneumatic nailer and one of the quiet compressors. For the price of a cordless nailer you can get a pneumatic nailer, a hose and a nice compressor. And that air compressor with a blower nozzle can be used for quickly cleaning up a work bench and power tools or blowing off dust from your clothes. I also use my compressor to apply water-based clear coats. For the pro driving finish nails all day cordless is the bomb!!!
Easiest answer! Ryobi brad nailer for your most trim work! Light gun, never jams, costs pennies!!! If you need speed and putting out thousands of nails per minute (like putting pickets on or balusters on the deck), go with Dewalt 2.5 inch angle nailer. I've tried every single brand and type of nailers and so far those two are my most favorite ones, and I am a milwaukee guy, so that tells you how much I trust in those two.
Brother, this was VERY helpful. I am not a pro. But I am a very experienced DIYer. I have done everything, except for finishing work. Right now, I am remodeling one of my bathrooms and for the first time, I am replacing baseboards. I usually attach all things with screws, and that won't do for finishing work, so I am learning new tricks. In as much, I picked up an 18 gauge nail gun. I was about to do both the baseboards and the trim molding with that gun. But then I watched your video. Now I know I need a 15 for the actual baseboards. I just picked one up on ebay. You saved me, literally, a day before I made that mistake. Thank you!
We use a 15 gauge nailer on exterior trim applications- deck skirt boards, 1x or 5/4 trim, and also to set door jambs. The BIGGEST nail I would ever use on crown, casing, etc is an 18. No way I would want to fill the hole left by a 15 or even 16 gauge nailer in crown or casing on interior applications. I tell you what we have gotten in the habit of using- 23 gauge pin nailers. They hold unbelievably well and on cabinet mouldings- other than crown to face frame- that’s all we use. Someone needs to make a battery powered 23 gauge nailer (it would be heavy I know) but that would be awesome. Embrace the pin nailer. It’s the best nailer for toe nailing mouldings together and will hold a lot better than you think. And a super small hole to putty. For interior trim 18 and 23 get the job done!
So I went and bought the DeWalt 18 XR just like you are showing... I give it to my helper to drive some nails into baseboard molding, I figure I would let him do a little easy work. It keeps jamming nails, I tell him to make sure he is following the instructions, clear it out and reload. Half an hour goes by and he keeps coming back telling me it's jamming. Now I am not one to just do everything, I try and let my guys figure stuff out. I have faith and figure he is doing everything correctly and I'm going to have to return this thing. I take a look at it and he is loading the nails from the top of the slide instead of the bottom..... After clearing out the jammed nails that have worked there way under the sliding cover it works perfectly. Unfortunately I can't say that for my helper. LOL I used it the rest of the day and am very impressed, thanks for steering me to this tool, appreciate your videos.
I think 16ga is very versatile. Kind of the 'jack of all trades, master of none'' If you could only afford one' id go a 16ga because generally you can do the vast majority of what you need with only draw back of larger holes.
Would love to see a video on nail placement on different kinds of trims. Other than not getting too close to the edge (and splintering the wood), I don't have a specific plan on where I shoot nails.
Dude you're one of the reasons I bought a Paslode 16g. I'm still using it for just about anything, including tacking door jambs before screwing then off
I have used the dewalt 18 ga after being a diehard paslode user. It is so much better for repetitive nailing. It’s a more accurate nailer In my opinion. Also angled is the way to go. Straight nailers seem to never be able to get into tighter places like the angle guns can...
I loved my 18g Senco cordless nailgun when I started doing cabinets. This was in 05-06 so there were no other cordless nailsguns in sight(well craftsman had one but it was terrible) and for doing tech work I needed something convenient. Also loved my 23g for attaching rope moulding and shooting crown miters together, especially on the smaller stuff. Between a compressed air tank(get an aluminium one of you can, so much lighter) for the 23g and my Ridgid 18g(it was a beast, never oiled it and it never jammed) and the Senco I was set. Seeing things like cordless miter and table saws, brushless motors(I bought the Makita impact when it first came out around 06-07) and cordless everything makes me wish this stuff was out when I needed it.
Any nail that goes deeper than 3/4 " into the stud is hard on the gun and increases the risk of hitting a wire or mechanical line. 16 gauge nails are. 1/5 the cost of 15 degree angled nails-wow....but I love a 15...it connects. Hitachi new cordless guns are the bomb . Hit just like air...because they use air.
I’m going to Lowe’s right now to buy a 15 gauge finish nailer. Thank you. Edit: Went to Lowe’s and couldn’t find what I wanted. I’m going online now. Thank you again for the vid.
"You should buy all of them" - that's about right. For pneumatics, we have a brad nailer, finishing nailer, framing nailer, roofing nailer, and palm nailer. Not even kidding. I would also have a siding nailer too, but the roofing nailer has an adapter. I think a better question about nailers than what should you buy is actually, "How many nail guns should you buy?" or better yet, "What's the right amount of nail guns you should buy?" And the correct answer is n + 1.
Hopefully I’m not double dipping on the comments, but I have a dewalt 16 gauge nailer and I use pasloads 16 gauge nails. Have been since I bought the nailer about 2 years ago. Works fine.
I do a lot of smaller bathroom and kitchen jobs and these dewalt guns make it so much quicker than having to set up hoses and compressor. The cordless roofing nailer is great too for repairs or to have a backup for the guy on the other side of the roof and can be used for siding with an adapter.
This video gave me exactly the information that I needed. I had it in my head beforehand that I needed a 15 and a 18 gauge gun, and you just confirmed what I was thinking. I’m a Building Services Engineer and occasionally I have to do some ‘fabrics’ work and a nail gun will come in extremely handy, also with my work at home making my own cabinets. 15ga for the meaty stuff and 18ga for the trim. Thanks FCTV.
have used trim head screws a lot doing commercial work with steel studs in the past. i like your videos ive been out of the trades for years but have continued to do wood working until my divorce when i had to sell the property where my shop was. i recently started a handyman business and do a little bit of everything i bought a 7 1/4 ryobi 18v two years ago to do some small mouldings and it work fine for the application i purchased it for still running all my old bostitch finish guns as they still work great . thanks for the vids im refreshing a bunch.
For window and door trim I use the Home Depot line of ryobi Brad nailers. Works in Canada during the coldest winters and ive dropped them many times they still work. Also cheap af....also the ryobi nailers have a LED LIGHT WHICH WORKS WELL IN DIM HOUSES
I have the Dewalt framer and it's GREAT but it jams periodically, as well as it is HEAVY. I am 64 and it wears me out. But it's a terrific time saver and does the job well. I do not have the 15gua Dewalt tho. I also own the the Pasload finish nailer, and it was my first purchase a number of years back.It's almost flawless. Never jams, and generally runs like a champ. But it uses those gas cartridges that always seem to be running out.
I recently went with hitachi brushless guns and there absolutely fantastic ! Mostly use a 15 gauge for interior door installs , my most used fun is the 18 gauge for just about all trim work except very large trim . Also a 23 gauge pinner . but now I don't know what to do with all my air stuff lol !
I noticed your comment about recoil. I spend most of my nailing time using a Brad nailer these days, but I have plenty of time on smaller pinners as well as full size framing guns. The recoil seems pretty similar across them all, I assume the weight is pretty proportionate to the force.
Sorry if this is a stupid, or pretty basic question but why not just use glue on everything? baseboards, shoe's, crown etc? isn't it faster because you don't have to use filler or sand as much? speeds up install time so worth it in terms of cost no?
I re-did all the baseboards in the house several years ago. After doing the first bedroom with a hammer and nails I got a cheap 18g nail gun. Saved me SO much time in doing the rest of the rooms.
I’m a DIY homeowner, not professional by any means. I do a lot of basic trim work, prehung doors, casing, baseboard, which gun would suit me best within that scope of work?
Orale carnalito..I have d DCN660 16G DeWalt myself....I love it for wat I do...ever since I was affected by Harvey I’ve been rebuilding my house ...of course ur videos have helped me buy my arsenal of tools n yes most r DeWalt ...u have helped me rebuild my house wit ur videos...muchos gracias carnalito.
At first when your video showed up in my search with 16mins of footage, i was like “aw man here we go again another guy with the bs of rambling like a rock star on internet,” but as i watched your transparency and honesty with humility i sat through your whole entire video and said to myself “shit that’s it?” 😂😂😂
Regarding pneumatic nailers, unless a person is using a 1" hose for 100' you are going to lose some pressure over that length of hose due to something called hose friction. A 50' 3/4" hose @90 PSI loses 5% of pressure. That pressure loss is even reduced further with 100' of hose. Also regarding 18 gauge nails, no one makes one longer than 2" or a gun that would shoot them as far as I am aware.
It is not that you are a bad salesman, it is because you an honest person. Honesty counts and makes one more powerful than the liars. God bless and thanks for your video. Just one question and that is I am a rookie and what is good for bases of the wall? Just average base. 18 or 16?
I have a 15 and 18 bostitch guns that run off air. It’s so nice to have both. Good video last winter I was looking for a video just like this trying to decide on a 15 or 16 gauge.
I love my 18 ga cordless dewalt. My other favorite gun is my 18ga narrow crown stapler. I use it to do moist stop flashing for nail on frames, amazing time saver and less wear on you vs tacker hand stapler
I’m a hobbyist but I do a lot of trim work/wainscoting in my house. As of late, I’ve been using those trim screws for setting the MDF work I’m doing. It’s easier than nailing by hand. I’d love to see a video on these fasteners
Batteries!? With nail guns you want light weight ...extending your arm all day gets painful. But frequent battery changes a hassle. What Dewalt batteries do you recommend ? I’m mostly a Makita shop until it comes to nailers. Except maybe Makita’s pin nail gun for glue ups.
I agree on the finish screws are a good investment, holding power, ease of use, miss with the screw can back it out, good luck on finish nail. One advantage to air can sling it over your shoulder I don't trust a clip on battery tools .I use senco with rolair twin tank, just over 1 minute to fill, refill during usage 10 seconds. Though battery has its advantages. And disadvantages as well as in must pay attention or the battery dies while on the ladder. Life can be fun at times and that's one of them. Do you have video on air verses battery?
Thank you. Great video and after watching it, I went to home depot and bought Dewalts 15 ga XR 20 v finish nailer and 18 ga XR 20volt brad nailer. Cutting the cord and going cordless. I love the tools.
I'm a DIYer but new to woodwork. If I were to buy just one nailer, which one would I benefit from the most? I want to install baseboards and trim windows.
I am a Milwaukee guy at heart , HOWEVER , I use the the 18 and 15 gauge Dewalt’s for one reason....I my opinion I think they are in the upper class of cordless finish nailers. They are not perfect , but I haven’t come across anything better at this time....and yes the micro nose makes for pinpoint accuracy.
Man... my buddy gave me a battery powered Ryobi 18 and it fires about the same as the paslode. Mainly use it at home when I don’t feel like hooking up the compressor. If you only want to buy or can afford one, pneumatic or otherwise, I’d say go 18 gauge. It may not be perfect for every application but it’s the most versatile in my opinion.
Just watched a 17 minute video titled "Which nail gun should you buy?" Answer; "My suggestion to you is go with 15 or 18. If you want to do 16, do that." That really narrows it down. Thanks.
Thanks RIchard for your videos. They all are excellent. Hoping someday you create a video on installing crown molding on a vaulted ceiling. Would really be a help! Thanks!!!
If you are not a contractor, the compressor-operated nail guns are cheaper, more reliable, and lighter to operate, provided you are a DIY. Note: Dewalt now has a quieter. flex volt 2.5-gallon compressor. As you know, compressor-operated nail guns are less than half the price!😁
I use brad on crown and casing. I use finish nails on baseboards and chair rail. I can’t bring myself to switch to DeWalt yet. $600 total for both guns. Both my Paslodes work fine. The finish nailer I got at auction for $75. I’m gonna wait till it dies.
Brian Heuer I know. Just rather buy a tool I don’t have with the $600. Been eyeing the Mafell jigsaw. Or the Mirka orbital sander. Both are $700 beans. Good tools ain’t cheap.
I use the milwaukee 18 and they are both good tools. The only thing I really like more about the milwaukee in comparison to my buddies dewalt is the milwaukee doesn't scream before the gun fires ( when safety is depressed) just after the trigger is pulled does it make a sound.
Once you cut the hose it's hard to go back, I never realized how much time I spent screwing around with kinks, loops and dragging the hose around corners until I bought my first DeWalts. I just wish they'd come out with a cordless pin nailer.
I haven’t had any issue finding 16gauge. But then again I’m remodeling my own house not as a business so I use a ryobi 16g nailer since it was cheap and the battery is the same for all my other tools. But thanks for the info!
I still got the 1st generation dewalt nailer with the nimh battery, still use it nearly every day and it’s near on 10 years old, it only twice broke down, both times I fixed it myself. The pasload is expensive to run, needs regular services and don’t work in the cold, not that I guess that’s a problem where u are! I don’t think it’ll be long before pneumatic nailers are pretty much obsolete
The Paslode was way cool for quick In & out jobs awhile back in yrs but those gas cans can get expensive! I ended up saling mine on craigslist and then bought the Ridge cordless nailer. Its basically the same thing as the Pasolde minus the cost of gas cans. But yea, the Dewalt are even greater.
I have run my Senco pneumatic 15ga & 18ga for 20yrs, I bought a pasload when they first came out it was nice for small jobs when I didnt want to drag my compressor out but I had alot of issues with my pasload. Im going to checj out the Dewalt guns now. Thanks
You won me over to your ability to explain when you hooked the 18 gauge on your pants and voiced your subtle and useful observation that it wasn't pulling on your pants/belt.
I have a ryobi 16 gauge , find it great as an all rounder for home renovations , if I had to own one only I think I brought the right one first , but eventually I will need to get a 18 gauge
Senco and Bostich are the best pneumatic, battery I’m not too familiar with but I’d guess all the major brands do the job just fine. Currently I use Ridgid air guns.
My God this guy has so many tools! He must make some pretty dam good money. I wish I could buy even half of the tools he has. I so jealous...but happy for him.
I did have a Stanley bostitch gas nailer and I found them very temperamental and then when I lived in Canada for a while I used the Milwaukee battery nailer for the first time which I was impressed with but I ended up buying the DeWalt battery pinner and they are quality. I think I’ll buy the 15 gauge one also.
Newby here. Would you say that the DEWALT 18 gauge is ideal for rebuilding my picket wooden fence? I’m in the market to getting one of these and need some guidance. Your help is appreciated.
Dewault is ok into soft wood ,try from nailing 1 inch exterior ply or oak . Nails bend or get stuck . If nailing heavy duty paslode works much better .
Of all the cordless nail guns I've seen and used, there is no beating the Hitachi/Metabo NR1890DR this thing slams nails like an ak-47 through 4x4, the dewalts just DO NOT nail in all the way! I got the plastic strip 21^ . It's just hands down, THE BEST portable nail gun! For framing of course.
my company uses nail guns to load containers, we are using a big compressed air coil nail gun at the moment, we need to shoot nail at a depth of up to 5 inches, could you please suggest an electric nailer that might be able to accomplice the same task? the compressed air gun is definetely powerful, but it is quite heavy and weird to use. we also don't always have a compressed air supply available, and driving hundreds of nails at these depts manually is really not feasable
This videos has helped me so much as I just got rid of my second hand 16g paslode and am looking to replace it. it’s dumb of me but I always thought 18g nails would’ve been bigger nails but now I know! I need the nailer for skirting and architrave on site so think I’ll stick with 16g both guns seem rad
I've seen several videos on this subject, and most were good. Yours was better. I think you did a better job of explaining where and why you would use a certain size/gauge of nail.
Now I have another excuse to buy more tools. Rich will you make another video of you doing wainscot from beginning to end with as much detail as possible with measuring sketching the project, buying the material, calculating number of stiles, and panels. Again thank you for the videos they are so helpful. Now my next visit is Amazon so I can put more tools in my cart. Keep those videos coming.
I build handrails and do finish work and I’ve been in production for years now and Senco fusion nail guns are the best by far ...Paslodes are good but to expensive to run in production.
Rafael Reyes I couldn't agree more. I bought the Fusion 18 gauge last year and am not disappointed. Small nose, lightweight, never misfires, dry fire lockout, batteries last forever, looks cool, ;-). I also bought the Senco cordless 15G and it has trouble driving nails into studs so I don't recommend it. I bought the DeWilt 15G pneumatic for heavy duty, all-day work and it performs flawlessly and with a super small nose it's great for t&g.
We went with Dewalt 20V 15g and 18g guns, largely because we're already on that battery platform. One problem: When pressing the tool against soft wood trim with only normal hand pressure, the "micro nose" dents the wood right next to the nail hole. This has forced us to go back to our traditional Senco pneumatic with its larger rubber nose on soft wood trim, undercutting the advantage we hoped for when moving to cordless. Milwaukee 18V line looks good enough to tempt us to add a second battery platform. Does Milwaukee offer trim guns with a larger nose like the Senco to avoid this problem with dents?
I have both of these nail guns and I absolutely love them!!! but I still use pneumatic nail guns it certain applications if you can afford to upgrade to the battery operated trim guns I highly recommend it. If not you should definitely look into buying the pneumatic versions of these guns . I actually have them both battery operated and pneumatic They are amazing guns and have been engineered with a brand new technology I believe it’s called smart point or fine point technology. This technology and these guns are the most user-friendly and reliable trim guns I have ever shot. Even the angled gun shoots every single time and anyone that has used a angled trim gun knows that they are not the most reliable when it comes to pulling the trigger and expecting a nail to shoot out!
There is nothing new about smart point technology. Bostitch has been using it for quite some time on their phnumatic line. Bostitch and dewalt owned by same company so the technology was transferred over.
If you want pneumatic dewalt isn’t too of the line. Bostitch And hitachi blow it out the water. Battery operated though dewalt and hitachi are the only contenders.
Are you a fan of pin nailers?
crunch9876 In my view you cant beat bostich
John Davidson well boating and dewalt battery nailer are 100 percent the same except for battery. What would you rather have a battery for one tool? Or a dewalt battery that could fit a lot of tools.
crunch9876 bostich neumatic i was talking about.. had the 23 guage used almost daily for 11 years with no issues
Man I absolutely love the detailed explanations provided. So often professionals forget to go into detailed explanations because it's so second nature to them. For a newbie, like myself, your talks are very informative/helpful.You're a natural teacher. Thanks so much for your videos. Keep them coming!
Don’t laugh me out of the comments but don’t sleep on the ryobi’s I have the 18 and narrow crown stapler and they work great especially for almost a half the price of Milwaukee or default. They just don’t make a framing gun
I like the Ryobi. I also have a larger gauge DeWalt, but I pick the Ryobi every time. Less fatigue due to less recoil, lighter, more quiet and better faster operation. Smaller gauge nails means smaller holes to patch up.
My 18 gauge ryobi have been probably the best $150 I've spent. I usually do light stuff though. About to buy a 16gauge ryobi also and then a dewalt framing. Battery powered all the way
Yo im a dewalt guy but the ryobi is best batt trim gun ive used
They got a framing one now lol
It gets stuck if u don’t use it often. Sometimes u get what you pay for 😅
I had to pause the video to write this...I’m only doing what this guy says. Look at his work, my goodness. Humble, honest and relatable.
Which gun you should buy depends on what you do for a living and your budget.
For the homeowner/diyer on a limited budget I recommend getting a pneumatic nailer and one of the quiet compressors. For the price of a cordless nailer you can get a pneumatic nailer, a hose and a nice compressor. And that air compressor with a blower nozzle can be used for quickly cleaning up a work bench and power tools or blowing off dust from your clothes. I also use my compressor to apply water-based clear coats.
For the pro driving finish nails all day cordless is the bomb!!!
Easiest answer! Ryobi brad nailer for your most trim work! Light gun, never jams, costs pennies!!! If you need speed and putting out thousands of nails per minute (like putting pickets on or balusters on the deck), go with Dewalt 2.5 inch angle nailer. I've tried every single brand and type of nailers and so far those two are my most favorite ones, and I am a milwaukee guy, so that tells you how much I trust in those two.
I second the ryobi for home users. Mine has been great.
hitachi all the way, try one and youll never want anything else
You are right. The ryobi is amazing... but the battery will not work at around 10 / 15 degree Celsius.
Yea the ryobi 18 gauge nailer is surprisingly good.
Brother, this was VERY helpful.
I am not a pro. But I am a very experienced DIYer. I have done everything, except for finishing work.
Right now, I am remodeling one of my bathrooms and for the first time, I am replacing baseboards. I usually attach all things with screws, and that won't do for finishing work, so I am learning new tricks. In as much, I picked up an 18 gauge nail gun. I was about to do both the baseboards and the trim molding with that gun.
But then I watched your video. Now I know I need a 15 for the actual baseboards. I just picked one up on ebay. You saved me, literally, a day before I made that mistake.
Thank you!
We use a 15 gauge nailer on exterior trim applications- deck skirt boards, 1x or 5/4 trim, and also to set door jambs. The BIGGEST nail I would ever use on crown, casing, etc is an 18. No way I would want to fill the hole left by a 15 or even 16 gauge nailer in crown or casing on interior applications. I tell you what we have gotten in the habit of using- 23 gauge pin nailers. They hold unbelievably well and on cabinet mouldings- other than crown to face frame- that’s all we use. Someone needs to make a battery powered 23 gauge nailer (it would be heavy I know) but that would be awesome. Embrace the pin nailer. It’s the best nailer for toe nailing mouldings together and will hold a lot better than you think. And a super small hole to putty. For interior trim 18 and 23 get the job done!
So I went and bought the DeWalt 18 XR just like you are showing... I give it to my helper to drive some nails into baseboard molding, I figure I would let him do a little easy work. It keeps jamming nails, I tell him to make sure he is following the instructions, clear it out and reload. Half an hour goes by and he keeps coming back telling me it's jamming. Now I am not one to just do everything, I try and let my guys figure stuff out. I have faith and figure he is doing everything correctly and I'm going to have to return this thing. I take a look at it and he is loading the nails from the top of the slide instead of the bottom..... After clearing out the jammed nails that have worked there way under the sliding cover it works perfectly. Unfortunately I can't say that for my helper. LOL I used it the rest of the day and am very impressed, thanks for steering me to this tool, appreciate your videos.
LOL that's funny. Thank you for your input as I'm trying to think what nail gun I should purchase for odd jobs and around the house work
I think 16ga is very versatile. Kind of the 'jack of all trades, master of none'' If you could only afford one' id go a 16ga because generally you can do the vast majority of what you need with only draw back of larger holes.
Would love to see a video on nail placement on different kinds of trims. Other than not getting too close to the edge (and splintering the wood), I don't have a specific plan on where I shoot nails.
Thanks for the review just went out and got myself the 18 gauge Dewalt nailer...wow what a nail gun no more charging up air compressors for me!!😎😎
Dude you're one of the reasons I bought a Paslode 16g. I'm still using it for just about anything, including tacking door jambs before screwing then off
Same here...going to have to sell mine for cheaper then he is now!
Robert Cary I don’t like the ramp up of the DeWalts
I have used the dewalt 18 ga after being a diehard paslode user. It is so much better for repetitive nailing. It’s a more accurate nailer In my opinion. Also angled is the way to go. Straight nailers seem to never be able to get into tighter places like the angle guns can...
I loved my 18g Senco cordless nailgun when I started doing cabinets. This was in 05-06 so there were no other cordless nailsguns in sight(well craftsman had one but it was terrible) and for doing tech work I needed something convenient. Also loved my 23g for attaching rope moulding and shooting crown miters together, especially on the smaller stuff. Between a compressed air tank(get an aluminium one of you can, so much lighter) for the 23g and my Ridgid 18g(it was a beast, never oiled it and it never jammed) and the Senco I was set. Seeing things like cordless miter and table saws, brushless motors(I bought the Makita impact when it first came out around 06-07) and cordless everything makes me wish this stuff was out when I needed it.
Any nail that goes deeper than 3/4 " into the stud is hard on the gun and increases the risk of hitting a wire or mechanical line. 16 gauge nails are. 1/5 the cost of 15 degree angled nails-wow....but I love a 15...it connects. Hitachi new cordless guns are the bomb . Hit just like air...because they use air.
I’m going to Lowe’s right now to buy a 15 gauge finish nailer. Thank you.
Edit: Went to Lowe’s and couldn’t find what I wanted. I’m going online now. Thank you again for the vid.
Same
Lowe’s is not the place to go for tools
"You should buy all of them" - that's about right. For pneumatics, we have a brad nailer, finishing nailer, framing nailer, roofing nailer, and palm nailer. Not even kidding. I would also have a siding nailer too, but the roofing nailer has an adapter.
I think a better question about nailers than what should you buy is actually, "How many nail guns should you buy?" or better yet, "What's the right amount of nail guns you should buy?" And the correct answer is n + 1.
Hopefully I’m not double dipping on the comments, but I have a dewalt 16 gauge nailer and I use pasloads 16 gauge nails. Have been since I bought the nailer about 2 years ago. Works fine.
I do a lot of smaller bathroom and kitchen jobs and these dewalt guns make it so much quicker than having to set up hoses and compressor. The cordless roofing nailer is great too for repairs or to have a backup for the guy on the other side of the roof and can be used for siding with an adapter.
Bought a Ryobi 18 gauge air strike, and love it!!! Has the LED lights to see in darker spaces.
This video gave me exactly the information that I needed. I had it in my head beforehand that I needed a 15 and a 18 gauge gun, and you just confirmed what I was thinking.
I’m a Building Services Engineer and occasionally I have to do some ‘fabrics’ work and a nail gun will come in extremely handy, also with my work at home making my own cabinets.
15ga for the meaty stuff and 18ga for the trim. Thanks FCTV.
have used trim head screws a lot doing commercial work with steel studs in the past. i like your videos ive been out of the trades for years but have continued to do wood working until my divorce when i had to sell the property where my shop was. i recently started a handyman business and do a little bit of everything i bought a 7 1/4 ryobi 18v two years ago to do some small mouldings and it work fine for the application i purchased it for still running all my old bostitch finish guns as they still work great . thanks for the vids im refreshing a bunch.
For window and door trim I use the Home Depot line of ryobi Brad nailers. Works in Canada during the coldest winters and ive dropped them many times they still work. Also cheap af....also the ryobi nailers have a LED LIGHT WHICH WORKS WELL IN DIM HOUSES
I have the Dewalt framer and it's GREAT but it jams periodically, as well as it is HEAVY. I am 64 and it wears me out. But it's a terrific time saver and does the job well. I do not have the 15gua Dewalt tho. I also own the the Pasload finish nailer, and it was my first purchase a number of years back.It's almost flawless. Never jams, and generally runs like a champ. But it uses those gas cartridges that always seem to be running out.
I recently went with hitachi brushless guns and there absolutely fantastic ! Mostly use a 15 gauge for interior door installs , my most used fun is the 18 gauge for just about all trim work except very large trim . Also a 23 gauge pinner . but now I don't know what to do with all my air stuff lol !
I noticed your comment about recoil. I spend most of my nailing time using a Brad nailer these days, but I have plenty of time on smaller pinners as well as full size framing guns. The recoil seems pretty similar across them all, I assume the weight is pretty proportionate to the force.
Thanks for explanning and demonstrating difference applications when selectibg right nail-gun! I'm a DEWALT person myself!
DeWalt woman here!!!
Gotta tell ya as a stair guy of 16 years your videos are very informative some things you do I learn from it but like any other carpenter we critique
Dewalt needs to start sending u some checks!
Clearly they do
Don't think this gentlemen doesn't get some perks from Dewalt, like being compted on nails, and he should by the way.
Sorry if this is a stupid, or pretty basic question but why not just use glue on everything? baseboards, shoe's, crown etc? isn't it faster because you don't have to use filler or sand as much? speeds up install time so worth it in terms of cost no?
I re-did all the baseboards in the house several years ago. After doing the first bedroom with a hammer and nails I got a cheap 18g nail gun. Saved me SO much time in doing the rest of the rooms.
I’m a DIY homeowner, not professional by any means. I do a lot of basic trim work, prehung doors, casing, baseboard, which gun would suit me best within that scope of work?
Orale carnalito..I have d DCN660 16G DeWalt myself....I love it for wat I do...ever since I was affected by Harvey I’ve been rebuilding my house ...of course ur videos have helped me buy my arsenal of tools n yes most r DeWalt ...u have helped me rebuild my house wit ur videos...muchos gracias carnalito.
Glad to help!
Great, I totally learned from this video. Yes, please tell us about the trim-head screws!
At first when your video showed up in my search with 16mins of footage, i was like “aw man here we go again another guy with the bs of rambling like a rock star on internet,” but as i watched your transparency and honesty with humility i sat through your whole entire video and said to myself “shit that’s it?” 😂😂😂
Regarding pneumatic nailers, unless a person is using a 1" hose for 100' you are going to lose some pressure over that length of hose due to something called hose friction. A 50' 3/4" hose @90 PSI loses 5% of pressure. That pressure loss is even reduced further with 100' of hose. Also regarding 18 gauge nails, no one makes one longer than 2" or a gun that would shoot them as far as I am aware.
The way u explain it,makes perfect sense. U need a show on HGTV or DIY. great video
It is not that you are a bad salesman, it is because you an honest person. Honesty counts and makes one more powerful than the liars. God bless and thanks for your video. Just one question and that is I am a rookie and what is good for bases of the wall? Just average base. 18 or 16?
I have a 15 and 18 bostitch guns that run off air. It’s so nice to have both. Good video last winter I was looking for a video just like this trying to decide on a 15 or 16 gauge.
I love my 18 ga cordless dewalt. My other favorite gun is my 18ga narrow crown stapler. I use it to do moist stop flashing for nail on frames, amazing time saver and less wear on you vs tacker hand stapler
I’m a hobbyist but I do a lot of trim work/wainscoting in my house. As of late, I’ve been using those trim screws for setting the MDF work I’m doing. It’s easier than nailing by hand. I’d love to see a video on these fasteners
joethebar1 we'd
Love the glasses while talking nails guns! Thought for sure there would be some terminator reference hut koh was good enough.
Batteries!? With nail guns you want light weight ...extending your arm all day gets painful. But frequent battery changes a hassle. What Dewalt batteries do you recommend ?
I’m mostly a Makita shop until it comes to nailers. Except maybe Makita’s pin nail gun for glue ups.
I got Paslode 16 gauge angled nails and they work fine in the DeWalt 16 gauge angled nailer
I agree on the finish screws are a good investment, holding power, ease of use, miss with the screw can back it out, good luck on finish nail.
One advantage to air can sling it over your shoulder I don't trust a clip on battery tools
.I use senco with rolair twin tank, just over 1 minute to fill, refill during usage 10 seconds.
Though battery has its advantages.
And disadvantages as well as in must pay attention or the battery dies while on the ladder.
Life can be fun at times and that's one of them.
Do you have video on air verses battery?
Thank you. Great video and after watching it, I went to home depot and bought Dewalts 15 ga XR 20 v finish nailer and 18 ga XR 20volt brad nailer. Cutting the cord and going cordless. I love the tools.
It's so much more convenient. How are you liking them a year later?
I agree with Richard. An 18 and a 15g nailer are what you will use. Or if you can only afford one gun, buy a 16g nailer.
Never judge a book by its cover!
VERY WELL EXPLAINED!
Two Thumbs Up !👍👍
I'm a DIYer but new to woodwork. If I were to buy just one nailer, which one would I benefit from the most? I want to install baseboards and trim windows.
I am a Milwaukee guy at heart , HOWEVER , I use the the 18 and 15 gauge Dewalt’s for one reason....I my opinion I think they are in the upper class of cordless finish nailers. They are not perfect , but I haven’t come across anything better at this time....and yes the micro nose makes for pinpoint accuracy.
Man... my buddy gave me a battery powered Ryobi 18 and it fires about the same as the paslode. Mainly use it at home when I don’t feel like hooking up the compressor.
If you only want to buy or can afford one, pneumatic or otherwise, I’d say go 18 gauge. It may not be perfect for every application but it’s the most versatile in my opinion.
Just watched a 17 minute video titled "Which nail gun should you buy?"
Answer; "My suggestion to you is go with 15 or 18. If you want to do 16, do that."
That really narrows it down. Thanks.
Thanks RIchard for your videos. They all are excellent. Hoping someday you create a video on installing crown molding on a vaulted ceiling. Would really be a help!
Thanks!!!
Warren Fipp check out Ron Paulk he has videos in details about crown molding on vaulted ceilings
If you are not a contractor, the compressor-operated nail guns are cheaper, more reliable, and lighter to operate, provided you are a DIY. Note: Dewalt now has a quieter. flex volt 2.5-gallon compressor. As you know, compressor-operated nail guns are less than half the price!😁
I use brad on crown and casing. I use finish nails on baseboards and chair rail. I can’t bring myself to switch to DeWalt yet. $600 total for both guns. Both my Paslodes work fine. The finish nailer I got at auction for $75. I’m gonna wait till it dies.
Worth every penny bud.
renaissanceman buy, try for however long til return expires. Decide then.
Jose Gomez I know I’m going to like the DeWalt. One power source. Paslode I have to have batteries charged and fuel.
Brian Heuer I know. Just rather buy a tool I don’t have with the $600. Been eyeing the Mafell jigsaw. Or the Mirka orbital sander. Both are $700 beans. Good tools ain’t cheap.
renaissanceman
Plus the Paslodes give off kind of a farty smell. My broken Paslode has been buried in a cabinet for the past 10 years. LOL!!!
I watched this to the. Somehow it is never boring, but enjoyable. Thanks, man
Thank you. Great job! You are a good presenter!
I like that 15ga but how big should I go if I want a through-and-through on a 2x4?
I use the milwaukee 18 and they are both good tools. The only thing I really like more about the milwaukee in comparison to my buddies dewalt is the milwaukee doesn't scream before the gun fires ( when safety is depressed) just after the trigger is pulled does it make a sound.
Once you cut the hose it's hard to go back, I never realized how much time I spent screwing around with kinks, loops and dragging the hose around corners until I bought my first DeWalts. I just wish they'd come out with a cordless pin nailer.
I have the DeWalt guns but they are the older 18 volt versions. I love them
I like the 'King of the Hill' reference you slipped in there lol
I haven’t had any issue finding 16gauge. But then again I’m remodeling my own house not as a business so I use a ryobi 16g nailer since it was cheap and the battery is the same for all my other tools. But thanks for the info!
Any gun is better than swinging a hammer all day.
robert winton A tool used to smack a 2x into place so you can us a nailer to fasten it.
Unless you're Larry haun!!
Trevor Zook larry hauns are framing god
@@HolidayArt that here reasonbuy.com/most-powerful-cordless-drill/
Who hammers at trim?
I still got the 1st generation dewalt nailer with the nimh battery, still use it nearly every day and it’s near on 10 years old, it only twice broke down, both times I fixed it myself. The pasload is expensive to run, needs regular services and don’t work in the cold, not that I guess that’s a problem where u are! I don’t think it’ll be long before pneumatic nailers are pretty much obsolete
The Paslode was way cool for quick In & out jobs awhile back in yrs but those gas cans can get expensive! I ended up saling mine on craigslist and then bought the Ridge cordless nailer. Its basically the same thing as the Pasolde minus the cost of gas cans. But yea, the Dewalt are even greater.
I have used a 15 and 18 ga for years with various nail lengths for the application. I don't think I have ever even used 16 ga. Nail. Good video
I have run my Senco pneumatic 15ga & 18ga for 20yrs, I bought a pasload when they first came out it was nice for small jobs when I didnt want to drag my compressor out but I had alot of issues with my pasload. Im going to checj out the Dewalt guns now. Thanks
You won me over to your ability to explain when you hooked the 18 gauge on your pants and voiced your subtle and useful observation that it wasn't pulling on your pants/belt.
Milwaukee with out a dout has the best cordless Framer out right now hands down. All my tools are Dewalt and RIGID now Milwaukee is part of my arsenal
Wouldn’t you agree the paslode is good for just hanging interior doors? The 16ga. 2 1/2”
Nail?
The most expensive one. Quality is everything. You don't want your project to fail.
Hey mate. Great video. I have a 16g cordless d\Dewalt - The 16 gauge paslode nails from Home Depot work fine in it.
Liked due to king of the hill reference 😂
Which do i buy for putting up a cedar fence?
Yea do something on the trim head screws and uses on the job
For door frames, window, and crown mold. Which do you mostly recommend?
Thanks!
I have a ryobi 16 gauge , find it great as an all rounder for home renovations , if I had to own one only I think I brought the right one first , but eventually I will need to get a 18 gauge
Senco and Bostich are the best pneumatic, battery I’m not too familiar with but I’d guess all the major brands do the job just fine. Currently I use Ridgid air guns.
My God this guy has so many tools! He must make some pretty dam good money. I wish I could buy even half of the tools he has. I so jealous...but happy for him.
It probably helps that he writes this off as a business expense
I want to build a box like a coffered ceiling for over my kitchen island. I also need to put in shoe molding. Can I do both with an 18 GA?
I did have a Stanley bostitch gas nailer and I found them very temperamental and then when I lived in Canada for a while I used the Milwaukee battery nailer for the first time which I was impressed with but I ended up buying the DeWalt battery pinner and they are quality. I think I’ll buy the 15 gauge one also.
Thank you so much for all your help we really appreciate it !!!
Newby here. Would you say that the DEWALT 18 gauge is ideal for rebuilding my picket wooden fence? I’m in the market to getting one of these and need some guidance. Your help is appreciated.
Lowes in Michigan has nails 4 the dewalt nailer. I can't Imagine they wouldn't have them in your neck of the woods. Puzzling.
I like the nails in the storage box, all of mine are in an ammo box and I have to drag all of them out to get the one I need. Top tip brother.
Dewault is ok into soft wood ,try from nailing 1 inch exterior ply or oak . Nails bend or get stuck . If nailing heavy duty paslode works much better .
So... we can speed it up like we use to do with old nail guns with air roll right! Nailing with not long lapse of time between them.
I’d also appreciate a jamb screw video. How often do you install jamb extensions?
Of all the cordless nail guns I've seen and used, there is no beating the Hitachi/Metabo NR1890DR this thing slams nails like an ak-47 through 4x4, the dewalts just DO NOT nail in all the way! I got the plastic strip 21^ . It's just hands down, THE BEST portable nail gun! For framing of course.
my company uses nail guns to load containers, we are using a big compressed air coil nail gun at the moment, we need to shoot nail at a depth of up to 5 inches, could you please suggest an electric nailer that might be able to accomplice the same task? the compressed air gun is definetely powerful, but it is quite heavy and weird to use. we also don't always have a compressed air supply available, and driving hundreds of nails at these depts manually is really not feasable
This videos has helped me so much as I just got rid of my second hand 16g paslode and am looking to replace it. it’s dumb of me but I always thought 18g nails would’ve been bigger nails but now I know! I need the nailer for skirting and architrave on site so think I’ll stick with 16g both guns seem rad
I've seen several videos on this subject, and most were good. Yours was better. I think you did a better job of explaining where and why you would use a certain size/gauge of nail.
Now I have another excuse to buy more tools. Rich will you make another video of you doing wainscot from beginning to end with as much detail as possible with measuring sketching the project, buying the material, calculating number of stiles, and panels. Again thank you for the videos they are so helpful. Now my next visit is Amazon so I can put more tools in my cart. Keep those videos coming.
This is a very good TV show and we love it!
I build handrails and do finish work and I’ve been in production for years now and Senco fusion nail guns are the best by far ...Paslodes are good but to expensive to run in production.
Rafael Reyes I've got a couple Senco guns that were handed down, 20 years old, and work great!
I was just about to comment this, the Senco fusion series are beasts. the batteries last for over a week aswell
Rafael Reyes
I couldn't agree more. I bought the Fusion 18 gauge last year and am not disappointed. Small nose, lightweight, never misfires, dry fire lockout, batteries last forever, looks cool, ;-). I also bought the Senco cordless 15G and it has trouble driving nails into studs so I don't recommend it. I bought the DeWilt 15G pneumatic for heavy duty, all-day work and it performs flawlessly and with a super small nose it's great for t&g.
senco and porta cable trim guns. hitachi 83a for a framing gun. pasload is a puchlist tool
We went with Dewalt 20V 15g and 18g guns, largely because we're already on that battery platform. One problem: When pressing the tool against soft wood trim with only normal hand pressure, the "micro nose" dents the wood right next to the nail hole. This has forced us to go back to our traditional Senco pneumatic with its larger rubber nose on soft wood trim, undercutting the advantage we hoped for when moving to cordless. Milwaukee 18V line looks good enough to tempt us to add a second battery platform. Does Milwaukee offer trim guns with a larger nose like the Senco to avoid this problem with dents?
Thank you I really appreciate all the information. You've pretty much answered all the questions I had.
I like using staples on the smaller trim when being fastened to other bigger trim