Is there a reason not to nail up drywall?





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I have a bunch of drywall to put up. I am staring at a loaded 15-gauge framing nail gun, and a drill + a box of drywall screws, and boy oh boy does that nail gun look tempting.



When attaching to wooden studs, is there any reason not to just nail the drywall up, rather than using screws?










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  • 6




    Inability to control the depth of the nail gun which is made for attaching hard thick boards together not soft thin drywall
    – Kris
    Nov 18 at 1:23






  • 5




    And the classic nail-pop that inevitably follows.
    – bib
    Nov 18 at 2:09

















up vote
5
down vote

favorite












I have a bunch of drywall to put up. I am staring at a loaded 15-gauge framing nail gun, and a drill + a box of drywall screws, and boy oh boy does that nail gun look tempting.



When attaching to wooden studs, is there any reason not to just nail the drywall up, rather than using screws?










share|improve this question


















  • 6




    Inability to control the depth of the nail gun which is made for attaching hard thick boards together not soft thin drywall
    – Kris
    Nov 18 at 1:23






  • 5




    And the classic nail-pop that inevitably follows.
    – bib
    Nov 18 at 2:09













up vote
5
down vote

favorite









up vote
5
down vote

favorite











I have a bunch of drywall to put up. I am staring at a loaded 15-gauge framing nail gun, and a drill + a box of drywall screws, and boy oh boy does that nail gun look tempting.



When attaching to wooden studs, is there any reason not to just nail the drywall up, rather than using screws?










share|improve this question













I have a bunch of drywall to put up. I am staring at a loaded 15-gauge framing nail gun, and a drill + a box of drywall screws, and boy oh boy does that nail gun look tempting.



When attaching to wooden studs, is there any reason not to just nail the drywall up, rather than using screws?







drywall installation construction fastener technique






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asked Nov 18 at 1:18









Jason C

4683715




4683715








  • 6




    Inability to control the depth of the nail gun which is made for attaching hard thick boards together not soft thin drywall
    – Kris
    Nov 18 at 1:23






  • 5




    And the classic nail-pop that inevitably follows.
    – bib
    Nov 18 at 2:09














  • 6




    Inability to control the depth of the nail gun which is made for attaching hard thick boards together not soft thin drywall
    – Kris
    Nov 18 at 1:23






  • 5




    And the classic nail-pop that inevitably follows.
    – bib
    Nov 18 at 2:09








6




6




Inability to control the depth of the nail gun which is made for attaching hard thick boards together not soft thin drywall
– Kris
Nov 18 at 1:23




Inability to control the depth of the nail gun which is made for attaching hard thick boards together not soft thin drywall
– Kris
Nov 18 at 1:23




5




5




And the classic nail-pop that inevitably follows.
– bib
Nov 18 at 2:09




And the classic nail-pop that inevitably follows.
– bib
Nov 18 at 2:09










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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up vote
14
down vote



accepted










Nobody uses a pneumatic nailer for drywall. And in a world where shortcuts are revered, that has to tell you something.



You know this already, but screws are the gold standard. They stay put and they pull the drywall as close to framing as possible. Badly set screws can pop, but properly set ones don't.



Nails were common in the past, but they were usually ring shank (for holding power) and with a slightly bigger head than a framing nail. (They also had a propensity to pop as framing dried out, in spite of the fancy ring shank.)



If you had to use nails, the trick is to set them just slightly below the plane of the paper without cutting through the paper. The dent from a hammer made this work. A pneumatic nail is either going to be set too deep (ripping the paper, and being out of the way of the taping knife) or set too high (not ripping the paper, but being in the way of the taper). There's really no way to get the dimple you need with an air nailer.



If you are seriously only looking at a drill, get an impact driver. You'll get way more control driving screws. (And impacts are great for a lot of other stuff as well.) If you have a ton of rock to put up, consider getting an actual drywall screwgun.






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  • You can very likely rent a screwgun from a local shop as well.
    – ratchet freak
    yesterday











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
14
down vote



accepted










Nobody uses a pneumatic nailer for drywall. And in a world where shortcuts are revered, that has to tell you something.



You know this already, but screws are the gold standard. They stay put and they pull the drywall as close to framing as possible. Badly set screws can pop, but properly set ones don't.



Nails were common in the past, but they were usually ring shank (for holding power) and with a slightly bigger head than a framing nail. (They also had a propensity to pop as framing dried out, in spite of the fancy ring shank.)



If you had to use nails, the trick is to set them just slightly below the plane of the paper without cutting through the paper. The dent from a hammer made this work. A pneumatic nail is either going to be set too deep (ripping the paper, and being out of the way of the taping knife) or set too high (not ripping the paper, but being in the way of the taper). There's really no way to get the dimple you need with an air nailer.



If you are seriously only looking at a drill, get an impact driver. You'll get way more control driving screws. (And impacts are great for a lot of other stuff as well.) If you have a ton of rock to put up, consider getting an actual drywall screwgun.






share|improve this answer























  • You can very likely rent a screwgun from a local shop as well.
    – ratchet freak
    yesterday















up vote
14
down vote



accepted










Nobody uses a pneumatic nailer for drywall. And in a world where shortcuts are revered, that has to tell you something.



You know this already, but screws are the gold standard. They stay put and they pull the drywall as close to framing as possible. Badly set screws can pop, but properly set ones don't.



Nails were common in the past, but they were usually ring shank (for holding power) and with a slightly bigger head than a framing nail. (They also had a propensity to pop as framing dried out, in spite of the fancy ring shank.)



If you had to use nails, the trick is to set them just slightly below the plane of the paper without cutting through the paper. The dent from a hammer made this work. A pneumatic nail is either going to be set too deep (ripping the paper, and being out of the way of the taping knife) or set too high (not ripping the paper, but being in the way of the taper). There's really no way to get the dimple you need with an air nailer.



If you are seriously only looking at a drill, get an impact driver. You'll get way more control driving screws. (And impacts are great for a lot of other stuff as well.) If you have a ton of rock to put up, consider getting an actual drywall screwgun.






share|improve this answer























  • You can very likely rent a screwgun from a local shop as well.
    – ratchet freak
    yesterday













up vote
14
down vote



accepted







up vote
14
down vote



accepted






Nobody uses a pneumatic nailer for drywall. And in a world where shortcuts are revered, that has to tell you something.



You know this already, but screws are the gold standard. They stay put and they pull the drywall as close to framing as possible. Badly set screws can pop, but properly set ones don't.



Nails were common in the past, but they were usually ring shank (for holding power) and with a slightly bigger head than a framing nail. (They also had a propensity to pop as framing dried out, in spite of the fancy ring shank.)



If you had to use nails, the trick is to set them just slightly below the plane of the paper without cutting through the paper. The dent from a hammer made this work. A pneumatic nail is either going to be set too deep (ripping the paper, and being out of the way of the taping knife) or set too high (not ripping the paper, but being in the way of the taper). There's really no way to get the dimple you need with an air nailer.



If you are seriously only looking at a drill, get an impact driver. You'll get way more control driving screws. (And impacts are great for a lot of other stuff as well.) If you have a ton of rock to put up, consider getting an actual drywall screwgun.






share|improve this answer














Nobody uses a pneumatic nailer for drywall. And in a world where shortcuts are revered, that has to tell you something.



You know this already, but screws are the gold standard. They stay put and they pull the drywall as close to framing as possible. Badly set screws can pop, but properly set ones don't.



Nails were common in the past, but they were usually ring shank (for holding power) and with a slightly bigger head than a framing nail. (They also had a propensity to pop as framing dried out, in spite of the fancy ring shank.)



If you had to use nails, the trick is to set them just slightly below the plane of the paper without cutting through the paper. The dent from a hammer made this work. A pneumatic nail is either going to be set too deep (ripping the paper, and being out of the way of the taping knife) or set too high (not ripping the paper, but being in the way of the taper). There's really no way to get the dimple you need with an air nailer.



If you are seriously only looking at a drill, get an impact driver. You'll get way more control driving screws. (And impacts are great for a lot of other stuff as well.) If you have a ton of rock to put up, consider getting an actual drywall screwgun.







share|improve this answer














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edited Nov 18 at 4:59









manassehkatz

4,761624




4,761624










answered Nov 18 at 4:56









Aloysius Defenestrate

8,67411224




8,67411224












  • You can very likely rent a screwgun from a local shop as well.
    – ratchet freak
    yesterday


















  • You can very likely rent a screwgun from a local shop as well.
    – ratchet freak
    yesterday
















You can very likely rent a screwgun from a local shop as well.
– ratchet freak
yesterday




You can very likely rent a screwgun from a local shop as well.
– ratchet freak
yesterday


















 

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