Building Walls ~ All about nailing patterns and placement
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- čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
- Take a deeper look into the proper quantity, placement, and techniques for nailing wall assemblies together with different types of nails. In this video video we look at pneumatic nail sizes verses hand drive types and also read the CODE BOOK! You might be surprised at the variation of nails needed depending on which ones you are using. Your framing will be stronger and pass code if you nail it right.
#building #homes #better
I am a homeowner with a day job who does not do anything construction related for a living. That being said I am working on framing out my basement and Bought this czcams.com/users/postUgkxHQsUrwNr5GQrnx9V4xDdUr56qxwuiBHt gun. I have done a few walls already, have probably shot a couple hundred nails through this thing and have yet to have a misfire. It works awesome, good depth on every nail if you have your compressor set right. My literal only complaint is that it is a bit heavy and my arm can get a little tired especially whrn I am nailing at odd angles. That being said I am super happy with it and would buy it again. Hoping the old girl allows me to get my whole basement finished out!
My Dad was a builder for 50 years. Also had a master hvac, master electrical. He passed suddenly in September. In his eulogy I thanked him for teaching me to use my head and my hands. Damn I miss the old man.
My sincerest condolences. I know it's tough & it doesn't get any easier with time. His memory lives through you and I'm glad you get to share such memories & skills with others. 🙏 Stay Strong
Very sorry to hear of your loss. Sounds like an honorable man I would’ve liked! Stay easy and strong friend and best of luck passing on the lessons you learned
What a beautifully done czcams.com/users/postUgkxYGamVaHfdHiPlAQaLa7zkwR02OKpGYDU ! The instructions and the photographs are brilliant. It is thorough and genuinely informative. Ryan got another winner! No one does it better!
I've been a builder for many years and have seen quite a fair bit of sheds. The plans in ryan's package czcams.com/users/postUgkxB7IXYxLzb_Ichhe45zM3Im5xfEiSp9vB have some of the nicest looking sheds i've seen in a while.
I like how you always mention your dad. Mine taught me most of what I know about framing. His thing was hammering down every nail sticking out of any loose board on the floor. Then he’d yell at all of us because no one wanted to claim being the one who left a booby trap board on the floor 😂! I can hear him now yelling, “someone must want to take a trip to clinic to get a tetanus shot in their hairy bunghole!!” He’s gone now. Thanks for making these memories flood back to mind. Cheers.
Sounds like me now
The fact that he has a code book on site makes this guy 100% legit!!! Great video
I'm a 70 year old carpenter and this is a very well made informative video. I wish information like this was available when I first started. Fastners have really improved in my career.
These guys have such a positive attitude in all of these videos. Rain, cold, snow, blazing sun, they stay so positive you kind of wish you were part of the crew.
Nail patterns are so important so many people just shoot like it’s the Wild West lol but the only time we use a nail gun it for studs and plywood siding but all the joist and rafters are hand driven
And I only use center match 1x6 decking hand driven as well soffit and fascia I use galvanized casing nails I really enjoy driving nails lol... great job man as usual keep up the great work
Sounds like you do pretty good work yourself! Thanks
Depth on sheeting is important if the nail is to deep no holding power...good video guys🤠👍🔨
Learned more from this video than 20 others
Really very helpful. Building a 16 x 20 addition, and I learned something new even at 65 years young. Thanks for putting this together. Biggest help for me was the book you had showing the codes for spacing.
Totally enjoy watching and the tips are second to none.....keep up the good work!!!! As a lifelong automotive tech for a major Dealership and a home owner this is valuable information!!
Towards the end of the video I was wondering how many nails actually go in a general house and then you nailed it. And then I got paranoid and looked around the room. LOL it’s easy to find a painter, all you have to do is look for the white line down the middle of the road. Lol
Nailed it
We hide the nails so you can’t see them. You’ll only see them if they don’t do their job correctly.
@@DiamondSupplyC0 yeah I’ve driven by a few construction sites, and I’ve learned to avoid them otherwise I’ll have to go to the tire shop later on. Lol
Good safety tips and a few things that I now know. Hi from Australia.
Thanks! Cheers from North Carolina
You really nailed this video 🥁🙄
Freaking life savers. Couldn’t be more thankful for the time you’ve put into these videos. Thank you!!
Winter as a carpenter = shoveling roofs, decks, wet and cold gloves, wet feet, cold out house toilet seat. These are what a carpenter has to go through to live. Gotta love it.
Arizona Summer as a carpenter: 120 degree weather, absolutely soaked from head to toe with sweat, heat cramps, porta potty boiling all kinds of fumes, cannot hold some tools without getting burned. Hot or cold, you don't win one way or the other. 😭👷♂️
@@rayg5445 lol. I take the cold anyday over that
I’m happy and won’t complain about any weather between 30 and 90 degrees. Sadly where I live it’s below 30 for most of the year it seems.
@@zackzander425 if you work as a carpenter that's tough stuff. I remember when I was in rough carpentry strictly in winter having to walk icy plates. When you're up 40 sometimes it can really dangerous. We didn't use harnesses cause there's nothing really to tie to. I'm OSHA wouldn't approve at all.
@@aservant2287 I am a carpenter from sweden and here it is about -20 degrees in the winter, most of the time it is -10 to around 0 degrees outside.
I’m a Framer out here in California and I love what I do makes me feel like an athlete building where there was nothing is amazing to do and watch ...
No kidding framing is not for the weak
R. M Framing is for the weak. They are not strong enough to be Masons and Bricklayers. Carpentry is an inferior way to build also.
@@zackzander425 what trade do you do?
R. M Masonry 👍
@@zackzander425 figured. Masonry is tough work no doubt. But most brick houses start with a wooden frame lol.
Very good advice for those that do not have any experience in the trade
Great video we use identical nail placement and technique. I like your father already we old timers do refer to it as stitching it up makes for a good strong build. Our customers rarely understand our nailing techniques are oftentimes the difference between a good build and great build. So far first guy on the net I would work well with!!
I wish I could like this video more than just once
I gave it a like for you.
Make othrr accounts and like it jow many times you like
Gayyyee
Really appreciate your content - clear, concise and full of information. Thanks!
Good job driving the toe nail home. I hate when guys on the job don’t. Good info man👍
Good stuff!! All of your videos are tutorials.Again, workmanlike procedures.
Nice videos, it will really help me with my construction projects. You seem to take pride in doing great buildings. It is really nice to see. Where I live (Quebec, Canada) every new house seems to be so low in quality and craftmanship it makes me never want to have one. Keep on the good job!
Wow what a great vid. You showed me some cool things about framing and your not only very exacting, but you also very respectful towards your father, which is so cool. As a father myself, this really hits home and makes me want to train my kids in hvac becauuse thats what I do.
Like how you said try not to put any nails in the middle always be curious of the next guy/ trades coming in.
When you demonstrated nailing a sheet edge you could nail into your knee. You got lucky. Educational video. Thank you! Greetings from the Netherlands
I don't think the gun was inline with his knee. It appeared like that because of parallax and the camera angle.
Live It! Love it! Can't get enough of it!!! Framing is amazing!! NR90AC3 (rare Hitachi nailgun) can shoot up to 3 1/2" .162 nails if you need it. At a min. we use .131 or .148 gauge nails as spec'd. Default sheathing is 6/12 (6" o.c. along all panel edges and 12" o.c. in the field) Engineering can specify some beefy shear walls - like 4x6 studs with .162 ga. nails 2" o.c. - but that was 1 out of 350.
Keep on making the videos....y'all are better than TV. In fact, you had better be cataloging your videos into a format to sell to vocational schools so they can have a great video library for the next gen (if we can motivate them to work with their hands and backs.)
Great job, as always. Upbeat and most of all REAL!!! May you continue with unbounded success.
--
Mike
It’s always nice for guys to think about other trades while working. As a plumber I really appreciate your consideration and thought of nail placement, hole saws are expensive 🤣😂. Nice video.
I like it when you shoot a ringshank into your hand, feels awesome. I really like it when someone else shoots a ringshank into they're hand, feels way better
Dave Gordon gave me chills try a staple
@@nicholasameline7362 - I am trying to cut back...
Lol! A finish nail through the fingernail or a 10d into the thumb...it's a tossup for me!😂
What about the old man that tries to get you hurt by not listening.
I once had a 30' lvl crush my finger by that old man, and I still went to work the next day.
Good video! I learned a few pointers myself. We need to meet your dad, as he was old school from the right school.
Awesome!!!
Great content! And yes it does hurt like a mother when you shoot a nail through your fingers/hand. Like poking a fork in a light socket, you learn quickly to only do that once :)!
Feels good to work with my dad. He always told me he wished I talked to him more, now we spend almost every day together and I wish things could stay like this forever. Apparently getting old is a real ass kicker, so now it’s my turn because my girl is pregnant. Hope your dad is well!
Thanks for video and I can say you are good teacher too👍
Great video as usual. Could you discuss the various angles of nail guns? Clipped head/offset vs full round head nails. (Newbie looking to purchase a cordless framer.) It seems as though code in my area allows for both to be used. Thanks so much for for taking the time to do videos.
What you said about toe-fastening is exactly what i do...and with screws. And about 1/2 the thickness of the material.
Where I caught on to it was when drilling angled holes in steel.
Even a split point bit won't stay put when drilling at an angle.. so I would drill a straight pocket first
then use it to pin the angled bit in position.
It works the same for wood screws. Bore a small hole straight in...then reset the screw at the desired angle.
Great video, informative, to the point and just the right amount of humor (Daryl).
Thank you, sir! That was very very helpful. As a first time “builder” I still have some questions surrounding headers but I suppose I’ll learn through the mistakes (or search in your video library perhaps?). Your toe nailing technique saved a lot of frustration and I appreciate that you show what the codes are.
I've heard of some areas changing code to require full head nails rather then clipped head but I Haven't personally came across it yet. Great tips thanks for sharing!
We use full head only
Love your videos and the tip about not driving nails into yourself.
I guess driving a nail into your knee hurts less?
See 4:07 into the video... ouch!
You guys do a wonderful job of explaining and illustrating.
High wind zone (think Katrina) and we need strapping over top and bottom of every stud. I envy you folks that can assemble houses so quick and easy.
The view that house is gonna have is a dream scape
Wonderful guide and tips! Thank you!
Crazy to watch these old videos. Different faces. Y'all have come along way
finally!!!❤❤❤❤ someone did a vid on space between nails!!!❤❤
1:34 another safety tip is to start nailing at the bottom. Start nailing at the top and you risk bump firing into your hand.... spoken from experience
thanks for sharing the knowlege!
Perkins you always give great advice! Thank god for you tube now days!
Great video, better than average level of information . Very good!
Back in the day: We had days nailing 150lbs of 16 coated Sinkers- 2 of us and a saw man on a 2200 sqft house.
The Electricians and Plumbers or other trades would complain that we built “lighting rods” instead of houses!
When I went all Masonry; so many houses we veneered or Fireplaces built- We actually nailed the sheathing as we put Felt Paper, Metal Lathe/ Wall Ties- the lazy framers didn’t fasten it to studs- guess they were afraid of too many nails? OR trusted us to cover their A..es by securing sheathing!?!
Blessings to YALL‼️•••and “Peace On Earth”
Still wishing Yall could video and Highlight YALL’s MUSIC 🎼🎶🙏‼️
🎄☃️🎁Thank Yall🎅🏻🤶🏻✨
🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑🍑
Thanks joe.. always love reading your comments
joe you ever own property in Maine?
Rob Bobcat:
No, just visited there. Northeast Georgia Mountains ⛰ have been my stompen’ grounds 64years-so far!
I know it’s old but awesome video my guy!!
Great video!
Like your videos, very professional, greetings from Poland
Very helpful! Thank you.
Also, can't help but appreciate how nice it must be to work on a site with views like that.
I'm not a contractor, just a diyer and I don't have a nail gun (yet), just a brad nailer. My "trick" with 2x4 framing is I always put 1 screw in each end of the stud, then I hammer in 2 nails. Overkill? Yes. But then I don't have to hold the studs while driving nails in with a hammer. Similar would go for a nail gun.
Go point on the toe nailing too. Again I'm a DIYer and not trained at all but it was pretty easy to figure out toe nailing of driving it in straight then turning it to a 45-60 degree angle.
BTW it's "sheathing" not "sheeting".
sheathing is the nerve wraps around your bones, sheeting is a 4 foot x 8 foot size piece of wood
Молодцы ребята так держать вы просто молодцы.
thanks for showing some paper info stuff, every country has their own codes but this is near in everywhere :}
Great job as always. Facts, fun....FRAMING!!! Thanks.
The experienced carpenter nailed it. The new guy screwed everything up.
I was thinking of becoming a mason, but nothing is set in stone just yet.
I was also thinking of becoming a plumber, but that turned out to be a pipe dream.
I was shocked when I got let go from the electrician's apprenticeship.
I used to work at an orange juice factory, but I got canned because I couldn't concentrate.
My sister was fired from the hot dog stand when she caught putting her hair in a bun.
Now, I know a lot of jokes about unemployed people, too... but they wouldn't work here.
Always good info , cheers
The osb on a braced wall panel requires blocking at the seams to get the required amount of fasteners on the edges.
Excellent thanks for the knowledge !
Thank you, very professional.
I work with an older gentleman for a few years that would always Nail in opposing directions. He would never just drive nails straight down. He would always put them in at a slight angle either facing one another or away from one another. He did so that way it's a lot harder for the boards to pull apart. It took him a little bit longer to do however, it worked.
Yes... he is right. Good move
Good video. Thanks.
Good stuff as always, keep it up dudes.
You should also talk about nail depth. I've seen so many guys nail off plywood with the depth adjustment at max, and they blow the nail almost all the way through the sheet.
Beatiful Toenail..
Nice video broski 👌
This is a great video brilliant Info into the codes and regs just found you channel subbed !!
Big big fan of these and you guys do such a superb job
There's a lot of places that the inspector will pull out his tape and check every wall and stud depending on the nail schedule on the blue prints and Earth quakes some county's are rite over fault lines and they take that stuff very serious
Love your videos. Love quality work! Y’all rock hard! 👍👍👍😎🇨🇱
Great explanations Eric! Especially your toe nailing style. We use staplers up here for wall sheathing, but those ring shanks are definitely much stronger for shear value. You guys do nice work!
@The Gooberment-Sucks 11/2''' or 2'' by 9/16 crown. In a framing stapler- pneumatic
You should mention putting an 1/8 gab between osb sheets for expansion.i see alot of guys putting it tight and yes IV seen bucking in osb makes siding look like shit
Excellent video. Please explain why you’re using 3”/3.25” nails rather than 16d. Is it that the thinner gauge nails will do less damage when doing toe-nailing and other more detailed framing situations.
I like the way you build. I use the same nails but I don't like them because they only have half a head. They don't need to be ring shank when they only have half a head. I use lots of them. 4" spacing and such. I like my 21° framer that shoots full head nails but it's like a hundred years old and it's heavy. I wish I could find full heads for my framePro
Parabéns you e melhor Gosto muito de ver seus vídeos
This nail gun is sold in Ghana. Really want to adopt this system
38-year Carpenter here again; you should try my invention sometime, I call it "the claw". Good for headers, jack studs and especially nailing stringers to posts on a deck! 1" in from the edge of board, 4-6 nails in a vertical line angled in towards the meat @ about a 30°-35° angle & again in opposite direction from the other side, now try to pry them apart! Have fun! I literally went back to tear a 2 year old deck down that I had built in order to build it bigger but the customer wanted it all new & we barely got the stringers pried away from the posts far enough to get a sawzall blade down in there to cut the nails loose! My helpers couldn't believe it! Otherwise known as "Da Claw" among several fellow contractor friends of mine! Oh, as far as headers go, do each end of one with the nail lines about 4 inches apart then try to pry that apart! Take care!
Anyone notice how awesome his background is most the video?
I must say when it comes to be building anything you have done every thing regarding standards and safety in all trades
Thanks for making video.
Well done guys.
Nice video man
Wonderful video, would suggest naming the code book (edition etc) and state you are working out of
Edit @ 4:30 North Carolina Residential Building Code, 2018 edition (based off the 2015 IRC etc.)
Holding your hand back that much wont stop it from skipping over accidentaly. That's why i hit the bottom first then let go with my hand so it wont hit my other hand.
FABULOUS!
Great video fella
I don't know why this one finally got me, but ok, subscribed lol
Thanks! Haha
Nice. Get more Hitachi air guns. They rock
I sure do appreciate that you took the time to put these videos up. BTW, it looked like your knee was pretty close there at 4:07... :)
In reference to stitching the sheeting to the stud, at what point do too many nails weaken the wood you are nailing to? every 4 inches times 2 sheets is a lot of stress on the wood grain isn't it? I can imagine a "V" shaped tear happening from what is effectively 2 inch spacing.
Framed this house once that the building inspector had us do spacing every two in around the perimeter and 4 in in the field. If your sinking the heads too deep your making it weak for sure.
Good question.. I’ve never seen this happen though with the small diameter sheeting nails going into the side grain
Also about the hand placement for nailing. NEVER EVER bump fire close to the top edge of the plate.. I had the saftey just barely catch buf the nail missed the wood flew a foot through the air and into my knuckles
I watch you from Switzerland, where we use the metric system. I noticed in this video the extremely small fraction of an inch figures you have to use for the specifications for nail sizes. Do you ever wish you could use the metric system? It does seem to make construction math easier, but I was curious if you ever think about this issue, or if you ever work in the metric system anyway, because I see most tools wherever they are sold now show metric measurements.
Metric isn’t necessary because of tolerances, lol. Even if we all switched over here, the production machinery and tools (like nailers) can only manufacture and put things in place within a 1/32 of an inch anyhow. Metric is just a phony idealistic system from the French Revolution. Look it up
as a physicist in USA, i can tell you most manual labor house builds are a crew of; 1 owner/financier, 1 boss, 1 supervisor, 1 foreman, + 20 to 30 uneducated illegal immigrant idiots from latin countries... 90% have never been to any schooling not even 1st grade...the supervisor shows the foreman how to it, then the foreman shows the idiots....idiots get to practice 15minutes, those that still cant do it correctly are reassigned to simpler tasks like clean up/ paint/ garbage/ getting food....so your question is irrelevant.....as for engineering yes it can be irritating at the 1/64 inch distance.....because 1/25.4 = mm, so 0.5 mm = 1 /50.8 inch.....the ratio of 1/64 vs 1/50.8 in reality is none....however when the code inspector from the government comes he will make you redo the work because it fails code! blame your queen + king for the FREEMASON inch system....btw do YOU know where and when and why you sacred METER came from!???
Where do I get a code book at ? what is the name of it?i like your videos good and great information thank you so much.i do have mixed feelings about toe nailing i know sometimes it is the only way to do the job .if it is done wrong it doesn't go into the other boards and sometimes I think it follows the wood grains penetrate less or in the wrong places or does not penetrate enough
Hah,stitching it up
Proven fact,nails on an angle are stronger.thanks for video.i been framing NOT ROOFING.....framing for a while and had a baby boy tell me I can't button it up.who says that
At 1:47 you mentionned about holding the the stud further up and that is also not correctly doing it because I have nailed myself because of not doing it correctly and the only safely effective process is by nailing the bottom one first and then letting it go for the other two because the framers that I've seen don't use Pasloads; they rather use the air guns that you can hold the trigger and go fast and I doubt ever changing that habbit no matter how much you'd advocade it and when I had framed alongside of pro framers; I had of course gone faster than they were going but only because I was racing and they weren't. So that is what happened with me; I split the edge of the top of the standing plate and I was holding it further away from the edge but it still went through the as it broke the through and lodged itself just above my muscle tissue about half an inch before my index's knucle and past the other knuckes the same way and then I pulled it out easily; then it had gotten swollen and hadn't gotten stiff or nothing else. Not sure about anti-biotics but there is another possibility of accidents and it could be avoided by use of a dado that would fit overtop of all the standing studs and would hold them correctly in place as a bonus if their all crowned and if they are all in the same directions or this dado could have somewhat of individual adjustment that would be user friendly like by just moving the piece to the correct spot would lock automatically and of course there isn't always an area that one could use these and the certainly would be in the way but if they were to prove more useful than a nucense; then right on. Cheers; so always hold further up and let go and remove your hand and that way nothing can happen to you unless it hits a knot and curves and hits in your juggler.LOL Just kidding.