a

21/08/2006 12:42 PM

Nail gun to penetrate oak

Hi,

I had purchased an electrical gun with the idea of using it for making
frames (while the glue is setting) and for other tasks. But I have
found out that it penetrates oak only by about 1/2". Will a neumatic
nail gun do a better job? What specs should I look at?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude


This topic has 9 replies

a

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

22/08/2006 10:18 AM

Hi,

Thanks for all the responses!

Could someone describe the difference between a finish and a brad
nailer?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude

Rr

"RonB"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

21/08/2006 2:57 PM

Qualified answer - yes.

However, I don't know what kind of gun you have and what size of nails you
want to use.

My old Porter Cable 18 ga. Pneumatic has driven literally thousands of 1/2"
to 2-1/4" brads. Mostly through Oak. That is what the pneumatic nailers
are supposed to do.

RonB

<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi,
>
> I had purchased an electrical gun with the idea of using it for making
> frames (while the glue is setting) and for other tasks. But I have
> found out that it penetrates oak only by about 1/2". Will a neumatic
> nail gun do a better job? What specs should I look at?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Aaron Fude
>

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

21/08/2006 8:07 PM


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi,
>
> I had purchased an electrical gun with the idea of using it for making
> frames (while the glue is setting) and for other tasks. But I have
> found out that it penetrates oak only by about 1/2". Will a neumatic
> nail gun do a better job? What specs should I look at?

Any air driven gun will work. The electrics are, as you see, less than what
you'd expect. Junk is a good term.

You can buy a small nailer and compressor as a kit. Porter Cable well as
other have them.

Ll

"Locutus"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

21/08/2006 9:10 PM


"Pop`" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:zZoGg.5186$6s.2437@trndny08...
> Here's a thought: If your'e using the nailer on an extension cord, try
> using the shortest one you possibly can. I thought something went wrong
> with mine for a bit, but it turned out it was the 50' of extension cord it
> didn't like (voltage drop). Moved close to an outlet & used a 3' cord,
> and it worked as I expected.
>

I can vouch for this, my Arrow electric nailer works great when plug
directly into an outlet, I can nail 1 1/4" brads into oak, even sets it.
When using an extension cord it doesnt even sound right and barely drives
the nail. I even had the same problem with one particular outlet....

Pn

Phisherman

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

22/08/2006 4:02 PM

On 21 Aug 2006 12:42:44 -0700, [email protected] wrote:

>Hi,
>
>I had purchased an electrical gun with the idea of using it for making
>frames (while the glue is setting) and for other tasks. But I have
>found out that it penetrates oak only by about 1/2". Will a neumatic
>nail gun do a better job? What specs should I look at?
>
>Thanks!
>
>Aaron Fude


Yes, a pneumatic nailer will perform much better. A nailer does not
require a large compressor--I've even used a portable 5 gallon tank
when a few nails are needed.

TT

"Toller"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

21/08/2006 8:16 PM


> You can buy a small nailer and compressor as a kit. Porter Cable well as
> other have them.
If that is all you want it for, the little Senco is a sweet compressor; very
quiet and light.
Sadly, there is a price to that; it takes a while to inflate SUV tires with
it.

GM

George Max

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

22/08/2006 8:40 AM

On Mon, 21 Aug 2006 20:47:27 GMT, "Pop`" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Here's a thought: If your'e using the nailer on an extension cord, try
>using the shortest one you possibly can. I thought something went wrong
>with mine for a bit, but it turned out it was the 50' of extension cord it
>didn't like (voltage drop). Moved close to an outlet & used a 3' cord, and
>it worked as I expected.
>

you could buy a better extension cord too. There are cords made with
larger gage wire. And they cost more too. Shocking, eh?

VB

"Vic Baron"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

22/08/2006 8:46 PM


"Toller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>> You can buy a small nailer and compressor as a kit. Porter Cable well as
>> other have them.
> If that is all you want it for, the little Senco is a sweet compressor;
> very quiet and light.
> Sadly, there is a price to that; it takes a while to inflate SUV tires
> with it.

If you didn't shoot them with the nails you wouldn't have to keep filling
them.

;)

Pn

"Pop`"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/08/2006 12:42 PM

21/08/2006 8:47 PM

Here's a thought: If your'e using the nailer on an extension cord, try
using the shortest one you possibly can. I thought something went wrong
with mine for a bit, but it turned out it was the 50' of extension cord it
didn't like (voltage drop). Moved close to an outlet & used a 3' cord, and
it worked as I expected.

That said, there's not much can beat a pneumatic nailer. Most of the decent
ones need about 90 psi to work to spec for the type you're looking for. For
your purposes, you might want to look at "brad nailers" rather than plain
"nailers". 18 Ga brads from about 5/8" to 1 1/2" are pretty readily
available. Whatever you get, be sure it doesn't take a special "nail" or
"brad" that you can't get elsewhere.

Pop`




[email protected] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I had purchased an electrical gun with the idea of using it for making
> frames (while the glue is setting) and for other tasks. But I have
> found out that it penetrates oak only by about 1/2". Will a neumatic
> nail gun do a better job? What specs should I look at?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Aaron Fude



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