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Can I Use a Nail Gun to Install a Hardwood Floor?
- Hardwood planks fit end-to-end and side-to-side with tongue-and-groove assembly. After you install the first plank in the corner of a room, every subsequent plank will fit tightly together to form a smooth floor. The groove edge of the plank faces the wall, and the tongue side faces outward; this is the part where you will insert the nails. The nails you use should have little or no heads, so they will sink slightly beneath the surface of the wood and will not impede a tight fit when you install the next row of planks.
- One of the best nailers to use to install a hardwood floor is a pneumatic flooring nailer or stapler. Made specifically to fit over the top edge of the plank and the tongue, this nailer shoots a headless nail through the tongue and into the subfloor or the floor joist beneath. When positioned correctly, making a mistake with this nailer is difficult.
- Not everyone keeps a flooring nailer around because it has only one use. If you're handy with a finish nail gun, you can use it to install a hardwood floor. A finish nail gun, designed for trim work, shoots a near-headless nail that does not mar the surface look of the wood, which makes a finish nailer effective for installing hardwood floors as well. To use this nailer, position the nail shoe on the wood tongue at about a 15-degree angle downward and inward, toward the plank. Depress the nail shoe while holding the nailer carefully in place, and pull the trigger. Use finish nails that are long enough to go through the subfloor, if there is one, and at least 1/2 inch into the floor joists.
- Until power nailers became common in the flooring industry, a manual flooring nailer and a mallet was standard, and it still does a good job today. Like the pneumatic flooring nailer, the manual nailer holds flooring nails and features a shaped nail shoe that fits right over the edge of the plank and the tongue. After positioning the nailer, tap on the nailing cap with the mallet to shoot a flooring nail, staple or cleat through the tongue. Flooring and mallet nailers may use gravity and a spring-load system to drive the nails, or they may employ compressed air to shoot the nails when you hit the nailing cap with the mallet.
The Nailing Process
Flooring Nailer
Finish Nailer
Flooring and Mallet Nailer
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