Framing nail gun questions

   / Framing nail gun questions #11  
I have a Bostich 28 degree wire welded framing nailer. Bought it 23 years ago and still works as advertised ! I like the wire weld as that little bit of wire left on the nail makes the nail hold better. Plus you get more nails per strip vs the plastic strips. Keep it well oiled ! A greater angled nail magazine lets the gun fit in tighter places. I buy alot of top brand power tools from CPO outlet. I get the reconditioned ones which are alot cheaper but work and look brand new and with a warranty !.
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #12  
Just get the angle in degrees close and the nails usually work. The important part is the nail spacing. The silence they are spaced apart is set by the paper, wire, or plastic collated ones. Keep in mind the wire spaced ones occasionally spits out wire fragments. The plastic spaced ones spit out plastic fragments quite often sometimes. Good time to be wearing safety glasses :)

Also keep the paper tape ones in a dry dry dry location.......
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #13  
I went through that a few weeks ago. I have a hardly used newer 28 deg HF nailer. Went to Georgia to build a garage and could not find 28 deg nails at HF, Lowes or Home Depot. My friends boy had a Hitachi 30 deg nailer so we used that for the most part. Just for the fun of it I loaded 30 deg nails in my 28 deg gun and if would jam I was going to throw it in the dumpster. But, 30 deg nails which are very plentiful worked great in my HF 28 deg nailer.

I was nailing overhead putting OSB on a ceiling and as I could stand on the ground and reach the ceiling I was elected to do the nailing. After half the ceiling was done using the Hitachi I decided to use my Harbor Freight. After about 20 nails I went back to the Hitachi. It was (seemed) a couple pounds lighted nad I could hold my arms overhead longer and easier with the lighter gun.

edit; I used paper collated nails on both nailers. HF and Lowes sell them.


I like my Hitachi it uses plastic collated nails.

I do wish I could find 3.5 ring shank hot dipped galvanized nails for it.
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #14  
I bought a HF finish nailer and it sunk 2" 15ga into rough sawn oak. I was impressed. :)
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #15  
After I called Home Depot, Lowes, etc., I'm confused and need advice.
1) that 21,28,30 deg. angle...is one "better"? I was told 30* is best as holds better.


The angle only affects how the nail feeds into the gun, it has nothing to do with how the nail holds. All the nails fire in straight.
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #16  
i have spent a lot of time on the business end a few nail guns over the years from bostitch, milwaukee, hitachi, harbor freight, i cant say that ANY of them were any issues more than another, honestly non gave me any grief. I was skeptical regarding my buddy and his h/f 21 degree unit. We framed out and entire 2000 ft house, put up walls downstairs also, you name it and i was astonished at the reliability of the crazy thing. So much so i bought one myself, finished out a couple rooms in my barn 150 sq ft walls and ceilings as we did it in rough plywood, then 3 deere stands 4x8, then framed out my 600 sq foot shop last winter so yea they are worth every penny, never jams unless i load it wrong or let go of the spring lever too hard and smash the nail/clip and it hangs on it but thats rare - for a cheap sucker i can say that BOTH of them have been 100% great - i dont see them on their website anymore they have different models/brands now
 
   / Framing nail gun questions
  • Thread Starter
#17  
I checked some expensive brands and read the fine print made in China on back of box.
Years ago I knew a guy who worked at a local bakery. He said they would have a run of, say, 1000 bags of Wonder Bread...change bags then run Sunbeam, etc. He said same bread but different bag and price!
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #18  
I use a Freeman PFR2190 21-Degree Full-Head. $120 on Amazon.
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #19  
I've gone though several different brands of nail guns and currently have Hitachi. While they all give you about the same results, there is a HUGE difference in how they feel when using them, and how often you have issues of jamming up or falling apart. When I built my dads house, he went and bought a Harbor Freight nail gun to help out. I had my Hitachi 21 degree 3 1/2 inch gun. They are night and day different from each other in what it's like to use them. Dad would grab my gun when I wasn't using it because it was lighter and easier to handle.

Something else to keep in mind is that the pointy end of the nail does not have any holding power. It is the shaft of the nail that does all the work. For the strongest results, you want to use 3 1/4 or 3 1/2 inch nails. When I nail two boards together, I like to see that tip of the nail poking out!!!!

https://www.lowes.com/pd/Hitachi-3-5-in-21-Degree-Framing-Nailer/3020227

https://www.lowes.com/pd/Hitachi-3-1-4-in-21-Degree-Pneumatic-Framing-Nails-1000-Count/3339334

and while you are at it, be sure to get one of those soft, kink free air hoses. They will make life with a nail gun so much better!!!!

https://www.lowes.com/pd/Flexzilla-3-8-in-Kink-Free-50-ft-Poly-Hybrid-Air-Hose/1000746772
 
   / Framing nail gun questions #20  
I use a Freeman PFR2190 21-Degree Full-Head. $120 on Amazon.
I have a Freeman 21 degree framer as well, but from their 4 tool combo kit. For my weekend warrior use it has been fine, but don't have another gun to compare against.
 

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