Saturday, September 26, 2009

How To Choose An Air Nailer

By George Kramer

If you are on the look out for a roofing nailer, you are reading the exact article. Before we go deep on selecting a roofing nailer, I could share an interesting story. I got a shock of my life as I saw my new roofing nailer slip out of my hand and fall with a bang on the concrete walkway beneath. I imagined a heap of broken pieces of my roofing nailer as I got down the ladder to collect it.

This was my first job working on a roof, and there is no way that I could afford to buy a new nail gun. When I got down to the nailer I was surprised to find that it was in one piece. It actually looked perfectly fine. What amazed me the most was that it worked just like it did before it fell.

I have gotten intense brand loyalty after this had happened. There is no way that I would ever buy another brand of a roofing nailer ever.

When I started as a roofing contractor, over twenty years ago, there weren't many options when it came to choosing a nailer. Now, contractors are swimming in options; the last time I counted, I came up with thirty-eight different makes and models. Unfortunately, a roofing nailer isn't a standard consumer product, so there aren't many brand-by-brand tests available to would-be purchasers.

There is a really good comparison done by Mike Guertin however. He is a contractor and a writer who lives in Rhode Island. He performed a test on eleven of the most common models. He did this test under hard conditions for a nailer. He did this test in cold weather on heavy shingles.

Mr. Guertin precisely evaluated each nailer and compared their features. He also evaluated the nailers power, speed, and recoil. Those aspects are the main aspects that make a roofing job a little more manageable.

Each nail gone had its positive and negative points, but there was three roofing nailer competing for the first place. Bostitch RN46, the Dewalt D51321 and the Hitachi NV45AB2 are the three competitors. Much to my astonishment, Hitachi took the edge. Toughness and reliability made it a first choice of many professional roofers. The toughness of it was reinstated by the comment of Mr.Guertin that it can withstand the weight of an 18 wheeler and still function well.

I vouch his statement since it is the same roofing nailer that sustained its fall from my hand and I still continue with it even today. - 22787

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