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The smallest, brad nailers which shoot brads up to 1-1/4 in. long, often sell for well under $100. You might be better off buying one.Roofing nailerCOST: $50 per day with compressorBENEFITS: wholesale and air Easy as pulling a trigger and faster than a platoon of hammer-swingers.Driving thousands of roofing nails with a hammer is like scrubbing the floor nailers at Grand Central Station with a toothbrush. Don''t put asphalt shingles on anything bigger than a doghouse wholesale and air without a roofing nailer. For wood shingles, nailers speed up the job with a roofing stapler. TIPIt takes a crew of three to get the most speed out of a roofing nailer: one person driving nails, the others Laying shingles in place.Air compressorIf you have your wholesale own compressor, you''ll save about $25 per day when you rent an air nailer. So if air you plan to use a nailer for eight days or more, buy a nailers compressor. If you''re wholesale framing up a wall or two, renting a framing nailer probably isn''t air worth the trouble. But it will save hours on a big job like a garage or an addition. You''ll nail studs, joists and rafters quickly, but more important, you''ll nail sheathing to walls and roofs 10 times faster nailers than you could with a hammer. Brad nailers shoot skinny wholesale nails called brads. Ranging from air 3/8 in. to 2 in. long, brads are perfect nailers and wholesale for most door and window trim, baseboards air and other moldings. nailers Aside wholesale from speed, you get better-looking air results with a brad nailer: no hammer dents in the wood, less splitting, smaller nail nailers holes to fill, and moldings don''t get knocked out of position as you drive nails. For heavier wholesale trim (3/4-in. thick moldings, air for example), rent a finish nailers nailer, which shoots thicker nails up to 2-1/2 in. long.TIP
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