In article <[email protected]>, Phisherman
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Brads should not be used at all for drywall.
Screw drywall...
;-)
--
There are no socks in my email address.
"Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati"
Uh... No.
The head on the nail is nearly non-existent and thats needed
to hold the wallboard to the stud.
--
The software said it ran under Windows 98/NT/2000, or better.
So I installed it on Linux...
"Bob Davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
>
>
"David Binkowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> Actually, why not use hat pins ? Or perhaps a thumb tack.
Ahhh... Did you spit the bait back out before the hook set? LOL
Actually I assumed from your question your post had to be a finely
crafted troll.
I have one of those Senco screwguns for drywall (works on wood
too, I assume for plywood framing mostly).. I haven't used it yet
but it seems real nifty. What that other guy said about screws
instead of nails is true also. No pops.
--
The software said it ran under Windows 98/NT/2000, or better.
So I installed it on Linux...
"Bob Davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Thanks for the informative, serious reply. In the meantime, I looked up
> Senco nailers and see they sell a dedicated drywall screw gun. That gave
me
> a clue that drywall should be treated special.
>
> Screws and my trusty dewalt drill will do fine for the amount of drywall I
> have to hang.
>
> Bob
>
> "Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
> > <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > >Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
> > >
> >
> > I would avoid using any kind of nails for drywall, at least in my
> > house. Use drywall screws and avoid those ugly nail pops years later.
> > Brads should not be used at all for drywall.
>
>
In article <[email protected]>,
Bob Davis <[email protected]> wrote:
>Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
>
>
I don't think so.
--
Larry Wasserman Baltimore, Maryland
[email protected]
Actually, why not use hat pins ? Or perhaps a thumb tack.
--
The software said it ran under Windows 98/NT/2000, or better.
So I installed it on Linux...
"David Binkowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Uh... No.
> The head on the nail is nearly non-existent and thats needed
> to hold the wallboard to the stud.
>
> --
> The software said it ran under Windows 98/NT/2000, or better.
> So I installed it on Linux...
> "Bob Davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
> >
> >
>
>
On 2003/10/19 12:13 PM, "Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
>>
>
> I would avoid using any kind of nails for drywall, at least in my
> house. Use drywall screws and avoid those ugly nail pops years later.
By all means, use drywall screws. Note that the fine thread variety are
meant for use with steel studs. Use the coarse threaded ones for wood studs.
Another reason to use real drywall screws is that they are coated to resist
the corrosion that causes rust spots to bleed through drywall joint
compound.
If you are hanging a large amount of drywall, a real screwgun pays for
itself in the time savings and convenience. But you can do just as good a
job with a cordless drill.
> Brads should not be used at all for drywall.
Even if you were going to nail up the drywall, you would not want to use
brads. Without heads, they would not hold the drywall against the wall
securely. Most of the nails would pull right through the drywall and provide
no holding power.
not even that.
"Gfretwell" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> It might hold it long enough for a bead of drywall adhesive to set.
In article <[email protected]>, lramsey@cox-
internet.com says...
> The Senco screw gun is awesome!! YOu will never regret using screws
> instead of nails except that it is slightly slower.
> \
> On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
> >
>
>
I hate to *ahem* admit it, but because I had no help and was sick with
the flu... Ok, no excuses. I hung the drywall in part of my garage
using a framing nailer. There, I've said it. It took a while to get
the depth right, but once it was set, it worked pretty well. About 3
out of 4 nails were sunk just to the point of dimpling the paper. The
fourth, of course, was blasted into the drywall to the point where the
head was barely visible down in the rock.
So... taping and cleanup were a bitch. I don't recommend this approach,
if for no other reason than that it'll be a PITA getting all those big
nails out of the studs and joists if I ever decide to go back and do it
right. It also just has to be some kind of code violation. But the
point is, it can be done using larger full-head nails, if you're
desperate. Brads certainly won't hold up anything.
As everyone else is saying, screws are the way to go. Next time I've
got to hang some drywall, I'm getting a screw gun and enlisting some
help.
Cheers,
Abe
--
A numeral would be more efficient than spelling out "ONE" in an email
addy, don't you think?
Thanks for the informative, serious reply. In the meantime, I looked up
Senco nailers and see they sell a dedicated drywall screw gun. That gave me
a clue that drywall should be treated special.
Screws and my trusty dewalt drill will do fine for the amount of drywall I
have to hang.
Bob
"Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
> >
>
> I would avoid using any kind of nails for drywall, at least in my
> house. Use drywall screws and avoid those ugly nail pops years later.
> Brads should not be used at all for drywall.
On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 17:42:08 GMT, "Bob Davis"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Thanks for the informative, serious reply. In the meantime, I looked up
>Senco nailers and see they sell a dedicated drywall screw gun. That gave me
>a clue that drywall should be treated special.
>
>Screws and my trusty dewalt drill will do fine for the amount of drywall I
>have to hang.
>
>Bob
What Renata said.
You can usually find them at the Dollar stores...or some other cheap
discount chain.
If yer doin' ceiling, buy a couple. They clog up easily.
Have a nice week...
Trent
Certified breast self-exam subcontractor.
On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
>
I would avoid using any kind of nails for drywall, at least in my
house. Use drywall screws and avoid those ugly nail pops years later.
Brads should not be used at all for drywall.
On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 22:26:54 GMT, Abe <[email protected]> wrote:
>I hate to *ahem* admit it, but because I had no help and was sick with
>the flu... Ok, no excuses. I hung the drywall in part of my garage
>using a framing nailer. There, I've said it. It took a while to get
>the depth right, but once it was set, it worked pretty well. About 3
>out of 4 nails were sunk just to the point of dimpling the paper. The
>fourth, of course, was blasted into the drywall to the point where the
>head was barely visible down in the rock.
>
>So... taping and cleanup were a bitch. I don't recommend this approach,
>if for no other reason than that it'll be a PITA getting all those big
>nails out of the studs and joists if I ever decide to go back and do it
>right. It also just has to be some kind of code violation. But the
>point is, it can be done using larger full-head nails, if you're
>desperate. Brads certainly won't hold up anything.
OK, I've got to try this. I admit to looking at the nail gun and
wondering if it would work, but never tried it. I can run about 8d
nails through the gun, so they aren't that much bigger than drywall
nails. OTOH, I've hung a *lot* of drywall over the years with screws
or hand hammered drywall nails and none of it has ever fallen down.
Tim Douglass
http://www.DouglassClan.com
Get one of those nifty bits that helps set the screw to proper depth.
Less than a buck.
Renata
On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 17:42:08 GMT, "Bob Davis"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Thanks for the informative, serious reply. In the meantime, I looked up
>Senco nailers and see they sell a dedicated drywall screw gun. That gave me
>a clue that drywall should be treated special.
>
>Screws and my trusty dewalt drill will do fine for the amount of drywall I
>have to hang.
>
>Bob
>
>"Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
>> >
>>
>> I would avoid using any kind of nails for drywall, at least in my
>> house. Use drywall screws and avoid those ugly nail pops years later.
>> Brads should not be used at all for drywall.
>
smart, not dumb for email
The Senco screw gun is awesome!! YOu will never regret using screws
instead of nails except that it is slightly slower.
\
On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
>
"Bob Davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Thanks for the informative, serious reply. In the meantime, I looked up
> Senco nailers and see they sell a dedicated drywall screw gun. That gave me
> a clue that drywall should be treated special.
>
> Screws and my trusty dewalt drill will do fine for the amount of drywall I
> have to hang.
>
> Bob
>
As Renata said, I recommend that you get the attachment thingy to set
it at the proper depth. If you decide to do without, the correct
depth is about 1/8" or so. Any less and the spackle will not hold.
Too much more and the paper will tear, which severely limits the
holding power of the screw head.
Oh yeah, coarse thread for wood, fine thread for steel studs. Also
coarse thread for that stuff that they try to pass off as wood at the
Borg.
-Chris
Well if using a finish nailer what about staplers? Like the SN45 and
such? Big stuff. Or the Paslode 1" crown.
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 19:21:10 -0700, Tim Douglass
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 22:26:54 GMT, Abe <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>I hate to *ahem* admit it, but because I had no help and was sick with
>>the flu... Ok, no excuses. I hung the drywall in part of my garage
>>using a framing nailer. There, I've said it. It took a while to get
>>the depth right, but once it was set, it worked pretty well. About 3
>>out of 4 nails were sunk just to the point of dimpling the paper. The
>>fourth, of course, was blasted into the drywall to the point where the
>>head was barely visible down in the rock.
>>
>>So... taping and cleanup were a bitch. I don't recommend this approach,
>>if for no other reason than that it'll be a PITA getting all those big
>>nails out of the studs and joists if I ever decide to go back and do it
>>right. It also just has to be some kind of code violation. But the
>>point is, it can be done using larger full-head nails, if you're
>>desperate. Brads certainly won't hold up anything.
>
>OK, I've got to try this. I admit to looking at the nail gun and
>wondering if it would work, but never tried it. I can run about 8d
>nails through the gun, so they aren't that much bigger than drywall
>nails. OTOH, I've hung a *lot* of drywall over the years with screws
>or hand hammered drywall nails and none of it has ever fallen down.
>
>Tim Douglass
>
>http://www.DouglassClan.com
On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 05:32:23 GMT, "Bob Davis"
<[email protected]> Crawled out of the shop and said. . .:
>Can a brad nailer be used successfully to hang drywall?
>
that's lousy bait...sit back and watch BAD do it...