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Thread: Hardwood Flooring Nailer

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    St. Stephen, South Carolina
    Posts
    159

    Hardwood Flooring Nailer

    I will be installing some new hardwood floors in the room over my garage in the next couple of weeks. I have been trying to find a nailer that will be able to do 3/8" - 3/4" flooring. I've found some with interchangable plates that will do different sizes, but have not found anything with this particular range.
    I found a really good deal on some 3/8" flooring that I purchased for upstairs, but downstairs already has some areas that have 3/4" flooring that I would like to add to eventually.
    Thank you in advance.

  2. #2
    When doing 3/4 I just rent a pneumatic one. After going through the first half of the room with a hammer driven one I was ready.

    For the thin stuff, I use a bostich floor runner (this I own). It works like a champ. The only problem is that you don't get real positive feedback when it runs out of staples so you shoot blanks sometimes without realizing it.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    37
    The Powernail Flex fits your requirements. The base plate can be adjusted for 3/8" to 3/4" stock.
    http://www.powernail.com/home/flex.htm
    It's a commercial tool, so it is not cheap.

    I have used mine to lay may floors over the years. I have no complaints. It gets the job done.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    LA & SC neither one is Cali
    Posts
    9,447
    I have done odd sized floor with the Bostich and just made a cover for the plate out of smushed cardboard, hardboard etc and just held it on with blue tape. I did about 2000 sq ft in our current house with tape and cardboard and never had to replace it and never had a single issue. It was Bamboo, I think 5/8". I just rented a nailer but we did it with several helpers (that all knew how to lay floor) in a weekend but it was new construction.
    Of all the laws Brandolini's may be the most universally true.

    Deep thought for the day:

    Your bandsaw weighs more when you leave the spring compressed instead of relieving the tension.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Newburyport MA
    Posts
    293
    I own a Bostitch flooring stapler, I have only used it for 3/4" flooring though. It has a couple of plates, the other is for 1/2" I believe. Following on from Van's comment I could see no reason why you could not shim below or above the interchangeable plate for the 3/8" flooring.

  6. #6
    Unless you are planning on doing this professionally, I'd rent by the day. I think the best tool for the job is a hammer assisted angled flooring stapler.

    Are you sure the upstairs flooring is 3/8" and not 5/8"?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    St. Stephen, South Carolina
    Posts
    159
    It is definitely 3/8" - I just placed the order on Sunday. This will be a pretty small run compared the rest of the house downstairs when I get to that. I like the idea of just shimming the plate. I was thinking that might work. The prices I have been getting on a rental - well, I could own one after 3 days.

    So - I think the plan will be to buy one for the 3/4" flooring and shim it to work on the 3/8' stuff.

    That Powernail is way out of budget!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Newburyport MA
    Posts
    293
    Todd

    I checked mine, the other plate is for 1/2". As I mentioned, mine is a stapler; I would have a little reservation about using a nailer on 3/8", the powernails that I have look a little heavy for that thickness of flooring. You might want to check it out.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    St. Stephen, South Carolina
    Posts
    159
    Thanks Bob - the model I am looking at will do both nails and staples. I think you are correct, the staples are the way to go on this 3/8" stuff and is actually what is recommended from the manufacturerer.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    St. Stephen, South Carolina
    Posts
    159
    These are the two that I am looking at:

    http://www.homedepot.com/h_d1/N-5yc1...&storeId=10051

    http://www.homedepot.com/h_d1/N-5yc1...&storeId=10051

    Any thoughts? Thanks again everyone.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    NE Ohio
    Posts
    7,056
    Too bad you're so far away.
    I'd make you a heck of a price on a HF flooring nailer.

    I picked one up three weeks ago for $99.00. If you know anyone that get's This Old House magazine, the March 2012 issue has a coupon in it for that $99.00 price. The coupon is good until June 6th.
    I just finished installing about 100 sq ft of 3/4" white oak flooring with it. I used Bostitch 2" cleat nails. The nailer worked perfectly. Not a single jam & it sunk the nails perfectly w/only about 75 psi of air pressure. A good solid whump on it made the T&G fit nice and tight.
    It comes with a 2nd plate for doing 1/2", that should easily be shimmed for 3/8".
    The HF uses either cleat nails or staples.

    I'm 50/50 on keeping it for future use. Not because of anything related to the nailer.
    Flooring and I aren't a good match anymore. Too much up and down is too hard on the old body.
    It took me and my wife 4 hours on Friday evening, all day Saturday and an hour or so on Sunday to do that 100 sq ft.
    I still have to sand, stain and put 5 coats of finish on the floor.
    I had a price of $800.00 complete to have it done by a pro.
    Materials (including the nailer) ran me about half that. For an extra $400 I could have just sat back and watched someone else do all the work!


    Also - see this:
    http://www.amazon.com/Cepco-Tool-Qui...ef=pd_sim_hi_2

    By the second board of the second course,,,,you'd about kill to have one...
    I foolishly thought I could get by without a jack of any kind.
    My wife couldn't put enough force behind a crowbar to push the T&G joint tight enough. I could, but it took both hands. My wife isn't good enough with the nailer, so we tried (in vain) to have both of us pry while I tried to fire nails for the 4th through final cource of nails.

    Flooring looks nice and straight - until you get it on the floor...

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