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Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer
Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer













dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer
  1. #Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer install
  2. #Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer driver
  3. #Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer full

We’d like to see DEWALT Improve two things on this nailer: Improvements to the DEWALT 20V Cordless Roofing Nailer

#Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer install

The nailer did not have the power to install the nail into the Hardie siding and punched the nailer back toward us resulting in a half-driven nail. We also tried to use the nailer to install Hardie siding over Advantec sheathing. Note – We were using the correct angle nails, a charged battery, and even replaced the coils to see if that would reduce the jambs, it did not.

#Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer driver

We also experienced a fair share of driver blade jambs with this nailer. This roofing nailer has a sharp recoil, a lot more than I’d like to see on a roofing nailer. We used this nailer on a shed roof installation shooting 1-1/4” nails and it’s super-fast for a cordless nailer. Using the DEWALT 20V 15° Cordless Coil Roofing Nailer The lever releases the driver blade and resets it for nailing. To clear a stall, you need to remove the battery and activate the stall release lever on top of the tool. When this happens the jam /stall LED light will flash. The nailer has a tool stall-release lever to return the driver blade in the event of a jam. When this happens, it typically means that the nailer’s driver blade did not complete the drive cycle and is not reset. There are five depth settings and we found that we needed to use the deepest setting to ensure nails installed flush. The depth adjustment wheel is top-mounted and is a turn-knob mechanism requiring your thumb and index finger to operate. DEWALT 20V Cordless Roofing Nailer Specifications There is NO dry-fire lockout on this tool. That’s over 100 shingles with 4 nails per sheet and then the ridge cap on the top. We installed 5 bundles of shingles on a single 2.0Ah battery.

dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer

It can install up to 500 nails per charge, or to put that into layman’s terms easily one square (100 sq.’) of asphalt roofing shingles per charge. The DEWALT 20V 15° cordless coil roofing nailer fires up to 3 nails per second on a 2 Ah battery. This new clip resembles a spring-loaded, slide-bolt which I would describe a sticky and sluggish to operate. The thinner canister was probably a trade-off to cut weight off the already beefy nailer.Īdditionally, the metal “nail door” clip is different from the pneumatic version. Just moving the cordless nailer around on our shed roof project popped the coil housing open a few times. The DEWALT 20V Cordless Roofing Nailer canister housing and the cover are made of thin plastic and is not as rugged as the pneumatic nailer’s canister. The nail canister adjusts to allow 3 positions: The nailer has a tool-free nail tray that easily adjusts to accommodate different nail lengths and a tool-free depth adjustment wheel.

#Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer full

Powered by a brushless motor this battery-powered nailer can drive the full range of wire-collated roofing nails from 3/4 in. The nailer’s nose is different from their pneumatic nailer – it has a square shape and we found it to have provided excellent stability and surface contact. DEWALT put a lot of time and effort in past years perfecting this grip, and it’s a winning design. It does have DEWALT’s famously comfortable grip. The DEWALT 20V 15° cordless coil roofing nailer kind of looks like they reused the casing of the 18-gauge brad nailer. We’ll talk more about this later in the review. I was also impressed with how fast it was at installing nails, and unimpressed by its sharp recoil when fired. and has a fly-wheel wind-up and wind down sound. The first impression on the DEWALT 20V 15° cordless coil roofing nailer is that it is heavier than its pneumatic older brother. We’ve been using the DEWALT pneumatic nailer for a few years and like it, but we’re super happy to see a cordless solution. This is the first battery-powered only nailer we’ve seen, we did review the Duo-fast gas nailer years ago, but it did not stick with contractors. We recently got our hands on the DEWALT 20V 15° cordless coil roofing nailer.















Dewalt 20v battery powered coil roofing nailer