pp

11/03/2010 2:35 PM

### Nail gun art

Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
wanna try this ?

http://www.wimp.com/nailart/

Smitty


This topic has 25 replies

DB

Dave Balderstone

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 4:47 PM

In article
<[email protected]>,
<"[email protected]"> wrote:

> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> wanna try this ?
>
> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> Smitty

Wish I could believe it was real...

Rc

Robatoy

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 5:29 PM

On Mar 11, 8:16=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Mar 11, 2:51=A0pm, Chasgroh <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:47:27 -0600, Dave Balderstone
>
> > <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca> wrote:
> > >In article
> > ><[email protected]>,
> > ><"[email protected]"> wrote:
>
> > >> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> > >> wanna try this ?
>
> > >>http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> > >> Smitty
>
> > >Wish I could believe it was real...
>
> > ...yah, that's some cool BS there... =A0;)
>
> > cg
>
> #######################
> I did some research =3D
>
> ###############################
> Fake, for several reasons:
>
> * As any shooter will know, shooting from the hip like that is very
> inaccurate.
> * You can't keep the rate of fire that those nails appeared at with a
> semi-automatic for that long, especially not if you want to maintain
> accuracy.
> * The rate the nails appeared at is much higher than the rate of the
> trigger pulls.
> * Not a single nail bounces off another nail (which would also be
> quite dangerous, and they should have worn more than simple eye
> protection).
> * All the nails are hammered in perfectly straight to exactly the same
> depth. A nail is hardly a ballistically stable projectile, and I
> wouldn't expect such perfect results.
> * A nail gun is not made to fire nails on a predictable trajectory.
> There would be a larger inaccuracy inherent in it.
> * No one got hurt. Due to the risk of bouncing nails off other nails,
> and nails tumbling and not hitting point first, nails should be flying
> all over the place.
>
> Also, but I'm not quite sure of this, I've never seen flat head nails
> used in a nail gun, I've only seen nails with a small conical head
> (Dyckert in Swedish, have no idea what the English word is. See image
> for dyckert on wikipedia:http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyckert).
>
> Smitty
> ####################

how about an endless magazine?

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 8:05 PM

On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 17:09:00 -0800 (PST), the infamous Robatoy
<[email protected]> scrawled the following:

>On Mar 11, 5:35 pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
>> wanna try this ?
>>
>> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>>
>> Smitty
>
>
>Bullshit.

Literalists are _sooo_ fun to watch react. <bseg>

--
There is no such thing as limits to growth, because there are no limits
to the human capacity for intelligence, imagination, and wonder.
--Ronald Reagan

aa

allen476

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 6:44 PM

On Mar 11, 8:16=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Mar 11, 2:51=A0pm, Chasgroh <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:47:27 -0600, Dave Balderstone
>
> > <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca> wrote:
> > >In article
> > ><[email protected]>,
> > ><"[email protected]"> wrote:
>
> > >> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> > >> wanna try this ?
>
> > >>http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> > >> Smitty
>
> > >Wish I could believe it was real...
>
> > ...yah, that's some cool BS there... =A0;)
>
> > cg
>
> #######################
> I did some research =3D
>
> ###############################
> Fake, for several reasons:
>
> * As any shooter will know, shooting from the hip like that is very
> inaccurate.
> * You can't keep the rate of fire that those nails appeared at with a
> semi-automatic for that long, especially not if you want to maintain
> accuracy.
> * The rate the nails appeared at is much higher than the rate of the
> trigger pulls.
> * Not a single nail bounces off another nail (which would also be
> quite dangerous, and they should have worn more than simple eye
> protection).
> * All the nails are hammered in perfectly straight to exactly the same
> depth. A nail is hardly a ballistically stable projectile, and I
> wouldn't expect such perfect results.
> * A nail gun is not made to fire nails on a predictable trajectory.
> There would be a larger inaccuracy inherent in it.
> * No one got hurt. Due to the risk of bouncing nails off other nails,
> and nails tumbling and not hitting point first, nails should be flying
> all over the place.
>
> Also, but I'm not quite sure of this, I've never seen flat head nails
> used in a nail gun, I've only seen nails with a small conical head
> (Dyckert in Swedish, have no idea what the English word is. See image
> for dyckert on wikipedia:http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyckert).
>
> Smitty
> ####################

Also at 51 seconds you can see 2 distinct and very separate lines
being formed at the same time. Also the nails feeding into the gun
appear more like a cartoon drawing than real.

Allen

LM

"Lee Michaels"

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 8:37 PM


"Robatoy" wrote

how about an endless magazine?
===================

Those are a "staple" in the movies.

Like those 50 shot six shooters.


Cc

Chasgroh

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 4:51 PM

On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:47:27 -0600, Dave Balderstone
<dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca> wrote:

>In article
><[email protected]>,
><"[email protected]"> wrote:
>
>> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
>> wanna try this ?
>>
>> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>>
>> Smitty
>
>Wish I could believe it was real...

...yah, that's some cool BS there... ;)

cg

Rr

RonB

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 6:45 AM

On Mar 11, 4:35=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> wanna try this ?
>
> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> Smitty

Sorry. That's just horse s**t. Creative by horse s**t nonetheless.

But I do kinda wonder how they did it.

RonB

pp

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 5:16 PM

On Mar 11, 2:51=A0pm, Chasgroh <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:47:27 -0600, Dave Balderstone
>
> <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca> wrote:
> >In article
> ><[email protected]>,
> ><"[email protected]"> wrote:
>
> >> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> >> wanna try this ?
>
> >>http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> >> Smitty
>
> >Wish I could believe it was real...
>
> ...yah, that's some cool BS there... =A0;)
>
> cg

#######################
I did some research =3D

###############################
Fake, for several reasons:

* As any shooter will know, shooting from the hip like that is very
inaccurate.
* You can't keep the rate of fire that those nails appeared at with a
semi-automatic for that long, especially not if you want to maintain
accuracy.
* The rate the nails appeared at is much higher than the rate of the
trigger pulls.
* Not a single nail bounces off another nail (which would also be
quite dangerous, and they should have worn more than simple eye
protection).
* All the nails are hammered in perfectly straight to exactly the same
depth. A nail is hardly a ballistically stable projectile, and I
wouldn't expect such perfect results.
* A nail gun is not made to fire nails on a predictable trajectory.
There would be a larger inaccuracy inherent in it.
* No one got hurt. Due to the risk of bouncing nails off other nails,
and nails tumbling and not hitting point first, nails should be flying
all over the place.

Also, but I'm not quite sure of this, I've never seen flat head nails
used in a nail gun, I've only seen nails with a small conical head
(Dyckert in Swedish, have no idea what the English word is. See image
for dyckert on wikipedia: http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyckert).

Smitty
####################

Sk

Swingman

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 1:32 PM

On 3/11/2010 4:35 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> Anybody with a sheet of plywood& a nail gun
> wanna try this ?
>
> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/

Damn nice framing job!!

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 10/22/08
KarlC@ (the obvious)

ww

willshak

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 9:59 PM

[email protected] wrote the following:
> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> wanna try this ?
>
> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> Smitty
>
That's pretty good. He must be applying some English to those nails
since he isn't even pointing the gun at the part where the nails are
supposedly sticking.

--

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeroes after @

LL

LdB

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 12:55 PM

On 3/11/2010 4:35 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> Anybody with a sheet of plywood& a nail gun
> wanna try this ?
>
> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> Smitty

Impossible. Nail guns do not have rifled barrels. The nails just
tumble through the air. Maybe one in ten would actually stick in the
plywood. As for accuracy you would be lucky to hit the plywood.

I have a couple of nail guns and have tried shooting them.

If your wondering why, a friend saw my Paslode cordless framer. He had
seen movies where they used the nailer as a gun. I bet him a box of
beer that it was BS and won. That being said you wouldn't want to be
standing in the line of fire. Those nails are really moving when they
come out of the nailers.

Likely all they did in the movie was to start with the finished
"picture" edit in a blank plywood sheet, then slowly edit the nails
back into view.

Reading this thread leads me to believe a few or you guys believe the
video. I guess P.T. Barnum was, there's a sucker born every minute.

If your still dumb enough to think "Duh! Da nails always go in
straight" then "Duh! Da range is less than an inch" about the length
of your perception.

LdB

Box of beer anyone? :)

LdB


KM

Ken Moffett

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

13/03/2010 1:21 PM

RonB <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]
oups.com:

> On Mar 11, 4:35 pm, "[email protected]"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
>> wanna try this ?
>>
>> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>>
>> Smitty
>
> Sorry. That's just horse s**t. Creative by horse s**t
> nonetheless.
>
> But I do kinda wonder how they did it.
>
> RonB

Yeah, and at the 56-second point he continues to pull the
trigger even as he looks away to his left.

Ken

Hh

"HeyBub"

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

13/03/2010 2:05 PM

Ken Moffett wrote:
>>
>> Sorry. That's just horse s**t. Creative by horse s**t
>> nonetheless.
>>
>> But I do kinda wonder how they did it.
>>
>> RonB
>
> Yeah, and at the 56-second point he continues to pull the
> trigger even as he looks away to his left.
>

He's REALLY good, isn't he?

s

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

13/03/2010 9:14 AM

On Fri, 12 Mar 2010 23:42:44 -0600, "Martin H. Eastburn"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Used a movie camera in single frame mode.
>
>I don't believe a user could hold up a gun and hose
>that long and pull his finger that many times without
>going into spasms!
>
>Martin
>

I really don't think it was anything that complicated. The guy
shooting the nails, and the Mona Lisa could have been (and probably
were) shot seperately. I also doubt film was involved.


>[email protected] wrote:
>> They solved that in this spoof by showing that the cover was left
>> dangling and the nails were being fed in from the floor. They either
>> taped sets of nails together, or more likely, reloaded during one of
>> the many stops in the filming they made.
>>
>> The whole thing was a pretty major dice and splice job.
>>

s

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 6:17 AM

On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 17:16:01 -0800 (PST), "[email protected]"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>On Mar 11, 2:51 pm, Chasgroh <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 16:47:27 -0600, Dave Balderstone
>>
>> <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca> wrote:
>> >In article
>> ><[email protected]>,
>> ><"[email protected]"> wrote:
>>
>> >> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
>> >> wanna try this ?
>>
>> >>http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>>
>> >> Smitty
>>
>> >Wish I could believe it was real...
>>
>> ...yah, that's some cool BS there...  ;)
>>
>> cg
>
>#######################
>I did some research =
>
>###############################
>Fake, for several reasons:
>
>* As any shooter will know, shooting from the hip like that is very
>inaccurate.
>* You can't keep the rate of fire that those nails appeared at with a
>semi-automatic for that long, especially not if you want to maintain
>accuracy.
>* The rate the nails appeared at is much higher than the rate of the
>trigger pulls.
>* Not a single nail bounces off another nail (which would also be
>quite dangerous, and they should have worn more than simple eye
>protection).
>* All the nails are hammered in perfectly straight to exactly the same
>depth. A nail is hardly a ballistically stable projectile, and I
>wouldn't expect such perfect results.
>* A nail gun is not made to fire nails on a predictable trajectory.
>There would be a larger inaccuracy inherent in it.
>* No one got hurt. Due to the risk of bouncing nails off other nails,
>and nails tumbling and not hitting point first, nails should be flying
>all over the place.
>
>Also, but I'm not quite sure of this, I've never seen flat head nails
>used in a nail gun, I've only seen nails with a small conical head
>(Dyckert in Swedish, have no idea what the English word is. See image
>for dyckert on wikipedia: http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyckert).
>
>Smitty
>####################

I can't believe anyone thinks this needed a serious evaluation. It was
OBVIOUSLY done as a joke.

Oh... Its a roofing nailgun. They shoot roofing nails which have
circular flat heads as shown.

Gj

GROVER

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 9:29 AM

On Mar 11, 5:35=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> wanna try this ?
>
> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> Smitty

Used to call that weapon a Hollywood repeater.
Joe G

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 8:12 PM

On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 17:29:59 -0800 (PST), the infamous Robatoy
<[email protected]> scrawled the following:

>> > >> Smitty

>> #######################
>> I did some research =
>>
>> ###############################
>> Fake, for several reasons:
>>
>> * As any shooter will know, shooting from the hip like that is very
>> inaccurate.

Tell that to a gunslinger who shoots 12,000 round a month. Muscle
memory becomes extremely good.


>> * You can't keep the rate of fire that those nails appeared at with a
>> semi-automatic for that long, especially not if you want to maintain
>> accuracy.

Didn't you see his calloused trigger finger?


>> * The rate the nails appeared at is much higher than the rate of the
>> trigger pulls.

Bump-firing does that.


>> * Not a single nail bounces off another nail (which would also be
>> quite dangerous, and they should have worn more than simple eye
>> protection).

Poetic license for Pros.


>> * All the nails are hammered in perfectly straight to exactly the same
>> depth. A nail is hardly a ballistically stable projectile, and I
>> wouldn't expect such perfect results.

No, the first several were 3/8" deeper due to the static PSI. Running
psi nails were all the same.


>> * A nail gun is not made to fire nails on a predictable trajectory.
>> There would be a larger inaccuracy inherent in it.

What? The guy's obviously a pro.


>> * No one got hurt. Due to the risk of bouncing nails off other nails,
>> and nails tumbling and not hitting point first, nails should be flying
>> all over the place.

Pro.


>> Also, but I'm not quite sure of this, I've never seen flat head nails
>> used in a nail gun, I've only seen nails with a small conical head
>> (Dyckert in Swedish, have no idea what the English word is. See image
>> for dyckert on wikipedia:http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyckert).

Those are roofing nails. _Very_ common.
http://tinyurl.com/y8ghxho



>> Smitty
>> ####################
>
>how about an endless magazine?

Pretty trick, wot? I'm sure they duct-taped rolls together. Didn't
you see the end of the endless roll on the table in the forefront?
;)

--
There is no such thing as limits to growth, because there are no limits
to the human capacity for intelligence, imagination, and wonder.
--Ronald Reagan

j

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 1:31 AM

oh, hey... just enjoy it for the 'photoshop' fun it obviously is....

Admirable job

Rr

RonB

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

13/03/2010 5:51 PM

On Mar 13, 7:21=A0am, Ken Moffett <[email protected]> wrote:
> RonB <[email protected]> wrote innews:992371ce-1398-49ac-814e-96eabe2e2=
[email protected]
> oups.com:
>
> > On Mar 11, 4:35=A0pm, "[email protected]"
> > <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> >> wanna try this ?
>
> >>http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> >> Smitty
>
> > Sorry. =A0That's just horse s**t. =A0 Creative by horse s**t
> > nonetheless.
>
> > But I do kinda wonder how they did it.
>
> > RonB
>
> Yeah, and at the 56-second point he continues to pull the
> trigger even as he looks away to his left.
>
That's exactly when I finally said "Horse Shit!!!!"

Rc

Robatoy

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 5:09 PM

On Mar 11, 5:35=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
> wanna try this ?
>
> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>
> Smitty


Bullshit.

Mm

-MIKE-

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 11:05 PM

> #######################
> I did some research =
>
> ###############################
> Fake, for several reasons:
>

Had to do the research, did ya? :-p


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply

Cc

Chasgroh

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 10:37 PM

On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 20:05:17 -0800, Larry Jaques
<[email protected]> wrote:

>On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 17:09:00 -0800 (PST), the infamous Robatoy
><[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>
>>On Mar 11, 5:35 pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
>>> wanna try this ?
>>>
>>> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>>>
>>> Smitty
>>
>>
>>Bullshit.
>
>Literalists are _sooo_ fun to watch react. <bseg>


...I like your first post! ;0)

cg

MH

"Martin H. Eastburn"

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 11:42 PM

Used a movie camera in single frame mode.

I don't believe a user could hold up a gun and hose
that long and pull his finger that many times without
going into spasms!

Martin

[email protected] wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 20:37:23 -0500, "Lee Michaels"
> <leemichaels*nadaspam*@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>> "Robatoy" wrote
>>
>> how about an endless magazine?
>> ===================
>>
>> Those are a "staple" in the movies.
>>
>> Like those 50 shot six shooters.
>>
>>
>
> They solved that in this spoof by showing that the cover was left
> dangling and the nails were being fed in from the floor. They either
> taped sets of nails together, or more likely, reloaded during one of
> the many stops in the filming they made.
>
> The whole thing was a pretty major dice and splice job.
>

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

11/03/2010 9:03 PM

On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 21:59:39 -0500, the infamous willshak
<[email protected]> scrawled the following:

>[email protected] wrote the following:
>> Anybody with a sheet of plywood & a nail gun
>> wanna try this ?
>>
>> http://www.wimp.com/nailart/
>>
>> Smitty
>>
>That's pretty good. He must be applying some English to those nails
>since he isn't even pointing the gun at the part where the nails are
>supposedly sticking.

Gravity fluctuates in that shop. Don't worry about it.

--
There is no such thing as limits to growth, because there are no limits
to the human capacity for intelligence, imagination, and wonder.
--Ronald Reagan

s

in reply to "[email protected]" on 11/03/2010 2:35 PM

12/03/2010 6:20 AM

On Thu, 11 Mar 2010 20:37:23 -0500, "Lee Michaels"
<leemichaels*nadaspam*@comcast.net> wrote:

>
>"Robatoy" wrote
>
>how about an endless magazine?
>===================
>
>Those are a "staple" in the movies.
>
>Like those 50 shot six shooters.
>
>

They solved that in this spoof by showing that the cover was left
dangling and the nails were being fed in from the floor. They either
taped sets of nails together, or more likely, reloaded during one of
the many stops in the filming they made.

The whole thing was a pretty major dice and splice job.


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