Thank you for being the first person I've heard in public saying he doesn't like distressed furniture. I can't stand it, personally, and everybody else seems to love it.
I get pallets free from work. I have a bunch in my shed, can't wait to get out there look at them and decide to do it another day..lol. Your chopping block / stool was the star if the show. Great info.
Never seen that punching tool before, v good! Love your honest style mate, cheers me up watching and gives me a laugh when I realise Im not the only one that gets frustrated
I've had that exact same gun for about 4 years and it still works good , I also have a regular air gun with a ball joint remover to gently pry the boards off, I made one of those pallet busters but being a cripple didn't work too good for me ! hard to use with a walker . in my chair the air hammer is easier to use thank you for the videos enjoy the turning ones this one is a bonus
i always learn so much from your channel & look forward to each new episode thanks for sharing! i spent many an hour pounding out & straightening reused nails for my dad
Like you, I started with a hammer and a nail bar. Progressed to a wrecking bar and a Burke Bar. Eventually, I built my own pallet buster very much like the one you built. AND, like you, what a time consuming pain in the caboose. Research: Nail Kicker V20. The price drove me away instantly. But the pain drove me back. I found a used one on Craig's List. You will never regret purchasing one of these. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND these. Instead of pulling the boards off then driving out the nails from the rear, you use the Nail Kicker on the FRONT and drive the nails through the board into the 2x4 stretchers. Often, the board falls off, many times you can use your hand to pull it off, and once in a while, you'll need a pry bar. Having NO NAILS in the boards cuts the break down time more than in half. IF you value your time in dollars, you will off set the purchase price very quickly if you do a reasonable amount of pallets. IF you BURN them for firewood, you will break down many more and the off set is extremely fast. In the time we have used ours, I could have purchased 6 or more Nail Kickers brand new and still be ahead. Note: The Nail Kickers have 4 different sized heads if I remember correctly. I recommend purchasing 1 or 2 sizes only. Just the sizes you are finding in the pallets you can find. The huge industrial pallets will use larger nails and require the larger size anvils and drive pins. The directions are clear, all tools included, and an oil bottle is supplied with the new ones, although any oil can will work just fine. Add 2-4 drops of oil every 4-8 hours of use. I use more to prevent premature failure of o-rings. Great videos. I enjoy watching all the videos you post. THANK YOU!
You're great man, I appreciate you making videos. You're very different from a lot of the other wood workers on UA-cam. You make me feel at home being from Texas and all. Yeehaaaw
hi , just ordered the nail punch air tool . I used to sell air tools for Snap On , and always told people to oil the tool at the end of use , couple of drops , run the tool , that means the oil STAYS in the tool whilst its stored and protects it as it cools down which is when the air cools down and turns into water to rust the internals , hope this helps ,
That nail remover seems to work really well. Some off topic questions, why do you have all those rocks on your lawn? And, how do you mow it with the rocks on it?
Was cool that you showed making sure the ground was wet to help prevent a fire from escaping. That's smart. Also I got a chuckle when the fire started and it startled you. I would have had the same reaction. 😂
As a metal detectorist and hobby woodworker. Nails in pallet wood is never a issue. Just get a metaldetector pinpointer probe and nails will never bother you again
work in a large metal fabrication shop that uses a lot of sheet steel and coils. Most of the pallets that we get in are made of 3x4 solid oak and 1”-1.5” thick oak planks. A lot of it is worth surfacing and using
I bought a pallet buster and that air nailer and absolutely love them. Although my pallets are for odd jobs, these two tools make the process almost fun. My air nailer is set to 95 psi and the force of it pooping out nails is dangerous. I now use a plastic garbage can and lay thick fabric on the bottom of can so the nails don’t ricochet and shot back at me.
I recycle alot of pallet wood. The pallets i get from where i work are usually 4' by 10' for sheet metal. Planks are usually 1" thick. Usually i use my recip saw and a demo blade, slice between the planks and runners. Then i either pop nail heads out or glue them in depending on project.
I work in a large metal fabrication shop that uses a lot of sheet steel and coils. Most of the pallets that we get in are made of 3x4 solid oak and 1”-1.5” thick oak planks. A lot of it is worth surfacing and using
@Patrick Grate we also arr metal fabricators. Im not sure of all yhe species of wood if found but i know oak, fir, and poplar are common. I also found a reddish color wood i think is alder, not sure. One tip if you dont like nail holes, drill and plug with dowels.
Our nail remover gun came with a swivel air connector. We place the boards directly on the barrel and shoot into it instead of the stool next to the barrel.
I have one great fun to use, it nice to take revenge on all the nails that have fought with over the years. I fire into a drum of water a lot safer then just letting them bounce around. Your video shows a couple flying out of the drum, but these are a great time saver. Loke your video as normal. Thanks Bob
Love that gun - awesome. R u going to run a metal detector across the wood to ensure no metal in there? I harvested palette once. That was enough for me. Thanks for sharing
Great video as always. I did think it was funny though about you not finding the pressure and as youre talking about it, its right on the box. Haha. Instructions from overseas are terrible. Looks like it really works great though!
Dang that little pneumatic nail remover is really cool, I hate pallet wood because it takes so long to remove the nails but with that little tool it definitely makes pallet wood a good option for outdoor projects or projects where the surface quality of the project doesn't really matter.
I worked in a warehouse for over 10 years. I've destroyed probably 100,000 pallets and used their wood to heat my garage and polebarn. The pallets with the square blocks in the corners and center are the best pallets period. They always have great wood and are thicker too. Take a sledge hammer and hit the square block. It will knock it right out and you will have flat panels to work with after that. Easy to get the nails out too when you knock the blocks out.
I see a lot of pallets where i work. Every now and then a pallet will come in worth keeping. I have found a couple walnut pallets, a pallet made mostly from quarter sawn oak. But the best one by far was a whole pallet made from curly maple, Even the 3 stringers were curly, some of nicest curl I have seen in person. After cutting the nails out i ended up with about a dozen 1x4x 1/2in pieces that would be nice for drawers or boxes
That pallet buster is an awesome tool! I can almost never pull those nails up without tearing the wood apart. They tend to use twisted nails that don’t pull easily. I cut the slats off of hardwood pallets and use an old hand plane to resurface them. Not may hardwood trees grow up in these northern parts so pallets are one of our only sources of free hardwood.
I get so excited to see some nice-looking pallets, old furniture, or some logs that could be milled into usable lumber. To everyone else, they just think I'm weird for getting that excited over some wood.
@@htcinfinity old furniture is my fav. Have to be careful not to tell them that I will be tearing it apart and making something new out of it. Some people think restoration is the only option.
I got one used on Amazon for 40% off the already low price last year, love it, for renovation demolition work, reusing wood when it's still good. I had a white oak pallet with 8/4 sides without cutouts for the forks, and a fiddleback maple pallet with thinner planks I used for drawer fronts because on nice wood I'd rather cut the nail holes out of the picture.
The recommended pressure may not be printed in the manual, but it's right there on the front of the box. I guess that kinda counts as the manual, maybe.
I like to stack a pile of boards with a lot of weight on it to stop the pallet lifting the bottom two approximately 9 inches in then whilst breaking apart you could fix something to your tree Etc
Great tool!! I noticed that the pressure rating is on Amazon's link you provided at 80 to 120 PSI. Available at a lower price from other sellers that may not offer free Prime shipping. Style: Nailer Air Inlet: 1/4 inch NPT Thread Operating Pressure: 80-120 PSI Driver Diameter: 0.16 inch Removable Nails Range: 10-20 gauge
Great video as always, i just wanted to respectfully point out that while I'm sure the instructions were terrible and the tool should have had the psi engraved as you pointed out, indeed the operating psi was right on the box in the shot at 17:57 😅
That AirLocker will also work to finish sinking large framing nails as well. Don't use it to drive the nail, use a hammer, but if you get one in a weird spot where you can't get a good swing on the hammer to finish sinking it (like in a corner) this thing works great at driving it the last 1/4 inch.
I make bitdhouses with treated lumber if I have it. Last longer and I don,t have to climb up and replace them. Binds doesn't care I don't do stuff with pellets as I get enough of those at work but a trick is to use two folklifts. One presses down and the other lifts....
I have got pallets from my work place with great wood! Pallets from Southeast Asia with mahogany 50% good dark wood 20% ok 30% light colored l would not use as l read it has a high silica content. Large pallets from Canada that new machinery was shipped in on quarter sawn pine 2x4x12’ l got two 4x4x45” walnut pieces a number of pieces of oak. The imported pallets are HT. The HT stamp means heat treated, kiln dried to a higher temp for a longer time in order to kill any bugs their eggs or large.
I'm only a minute in, and as a budding woodworker (I'm sure most watchers of your channel are) I couldn't agree more. I never understand why people buy that stuff. Apparently it sells well, but I would be so much more fulfilled and happy making things that are truly beautiful. Solid joinery, nice clean finish, let the natural wood express it's natural beauty. Just my two cents, but I'm glad you - as an "influencer" in the realm of WWing say this.
Awesome job and info... unlike you I have to use as much free or very cheap as I can ...but then again I don't make nearly as nice of stuff as you. And I have learned so much from you... basically all I know about grain I learned from you! And it has really helped me in my carving skills.... thanks for sharing your knowledge with all of us lowly nubies ! It really helps...
Grabbed one of those for $40 back when lumber was way up, paid for itself on the first batch of reclaimed framing material that would have otherwise been tossed because of the time and frustration of pulling them manually
I recently found a possible source of really nice reclaimed wood. I got pieces of a family heirloom piano. It was called 'untuneable' so not even something my sis could donate to anybody. So, a very large, VERY heavy paperweight. I didn't know until we started to dismantle it, but the front panel is a solid slab of gorgeous birdseye maple without a flaw. The keyboard cover is oak. I'm thinking of making coasters from the keys (since the thing is over a hundred years old there may be issues, though, if the white keys are actually ivory.) I want to re-use as much as possible and give my grandmother's piano a second life. My sis wants to turn the inner strings into a water feature. People are GIVING old pianos away.Once I get my shop set up better I am going to have to look in to how to transport the heavy bastards. Until then, pallets. I just this week got an Air Locker and totally agree. Use eye protection always - those nails zing all over the place. Also, don't burn the scrap wood! I am bagging up small pieces for kindling and larger broken pieces for camp wood. Have you SEEN what they charge for camp wood? When I get excess I can probably sell that too!
Piano's from before the 50's are most interesting. We use the black keys (many were pure ebony) for accents, pens and such. And much of the panels are actually wide boards not glue ups. Seems after the 50's veneers came into vogue and are less versatile in reuse. Armours are same way.
I used to get a lot of the 8 ft pallets at work, and I'd just save the 2x4's. They're normally twisted and/or warped but I used them for thinks like chicken coops and frames for things around the homestead. My wife had learned that I don't do pintrest pallet creations. Lol
Pallet splitters can be brought, possibly called floor board lifters, a flat recking bars are better than 'round' ones, a good pair of pliers are useful in straighting nails before driving them out.
I ended up crinkling up some packing paper and putting it in the barrel. That stopped all the "bounce". Coulda sworn I filmed and put it in the video. But I guess it got lost somehow.
One trick I found. Once you get the bottom boards off, with the top boards down, stand on the pallet and hit the sides of the blocks or stringers with a sledge hammer.
Not a super fan of distress furniture. However, I have seen some nicely done. About the nails is a great tool if you are using pallets very like myself. Thy for sharing.
Here is my suggestion, which eliminates most of the work. Use a dowel making bit to drill down around every nail. The nail cones out with the dowel. Fix the hole later as part of the project, but only to the degree necessary to keep the needed esthetics of each project .
Use airlock shooting nails out into a 5 gal bucket with a little water in it. Much safer and nail tended to stay in the bucket. Less to find with magnet.
For me I found it much faster to use recip saw with metal cutting blade - slide blade between boards and cut nails - can disassemble a pallet in less than a min - then punch the nails.
I'm fully with you on the whole 'distressed' furniture shtick... I spent many years learning fine cabinetry and working at a master craft level. That fake fustic stuff just hurts my eyes and irritates my soul...
Different pallets require different tools and a little thought. Some are easy and others have so many nails or staples that it takes a lot of time. Any rebuilt pallet has probably got cut off nails and that makes milling them properly impossible. Look for the specialty pallets that have added wood for some special purpose, they have more usable wood.
I've found a good technique to save the whole plank on the top and bottom. You put a 2x4 in the same side of the one inside the pallets. Then, you place something under the 2x4 that is trespassing the pallets and then just hammer the 2x4 that is from the pallet. It'll give a even surface under the planks so it don't crack in pieces and... I mean it's easy and you always have spare 2x4 so... ;)
I too had seen one of these being used to break down pallets, and for the priceIwas willing to try it out, assuming that if it worked for me the way it did in that video, the savings of aggravation would be well worth the price tag. Well…to be honest… I don’t regret a single dollar of its price, and I had a freaking blast blasting 💥nails out of a huge pile of wood. If I hadn’t pulled a double as soon as I got to the woodpile (stepped on two nails at the same time about an inch away from each other 😖 🤕 ), then it might have been a perfect day breaking down pallet wood.
Hi Shawn, please check how the wood was treated and what was it was used to transport. Some pallets were treated with quite nasty chemicals and/or have been used to transport these, in case of doubt wear a mask while working with them. Might be paranoid, but I'd rather err on the safe side of things and see a lot more of your videos than the opposite, cheers. :-)
OMG Magazine tetanus injectors! LOL When you were talking about not having the psi operating pressure, the box had it right on the front. LOL That's something I would miss as well. I think that denailer is a great tool.
It must be a regional thing because all the local pallets I get are very heavy solid oak without knots. The nails hold on for dear life while trying to rip them apart. 3/4 thick boards and the side boards are oak too. The only time I see pallets of an inferior wood is when they came in from out of state. We lost 100's of thousands of Ash trees here in Iowa to the Emerald Ash Borer insect. Seemed like a waste to see healthy trees cut down and burned to try and stop the spread. Those trees could have been used for pallets if nothing else.
@@KipdoesStuff Do you really think mankind can kill every breeding pair of Emerald Ash Borer on the planet? If we were that talented the mosquito and cockroach would have been eliminated decades ago. To think like that is like believing a mask can stop Covid and there's zero data to prove those did anything at all!
DANGER: many pallets are treated with a toxic insecticide called methyl bromide. Most treated pallets are stamped with an 'MB' on a side board, but is it worth the risk to have this in your projects? Not to mention the danger from breathing it in (airborne dust) when machining the wood. It's also toxic when burned (the smoke).
Air pressure level is on the box in the shot when you are talking about what the air pressure should be🤦🤣🤣 didn't have the research past looking at the box🤣🤣
You’re welcome to have your own opinion, don’t get me wrong. There’s also some people that thought the Pontiac Aztec looked good. As we say in the south, Bless yall’s heart!
Why would you pee people off, it's just what you like, I'm opposite to you, but that's ok, it's what makes the world interesting place, if everyone liked the same thing, that would be a boring life, I subbed, awesome stuff
An alternative to using a sawsall to cut the nails shorter for easier hammering is a heavy-duty large bolt cutter. Tedious but a little safer than a sawsall.
Never have. Too cheap. Dont drink either. I’ll assume you’re by nature a rude insecure individual because this is something you’d never say to a strangers face but in anonymous comment sections….
@@skyeditor1740 Nah, I just don't believe for a second you've ever gotten in the face of a stranger for no reason to insult their voice. People who troll online just aren't the type.
Thank you for being the first person I've heard in public saying he doesn't like distressed furniture. I can't stand it, personally, and everybody else seems to love it.
I hate distressed furniture too.
Watch some interior decorating channels, they all seem to hate the distressed look as well as unbridled "farmhouse" styling that it seems to fit into.
Totally agree. I saw one video of someone reclaiming a nice antique from a shabby chic makeover. It may have saved the marriage : )
Indeed, I loved hearing it also
i am loving my airlocker saves me soo much time... enjoy your videos!
I get pallets free from work. I have a bunch in my shed, can't wait to get out there look at them and decide to do it another day..lol.
Your chopping block / stool was the star if the show. Great info.
Never seen that punching tool before, v good! Love your honest style mate, cheers me up watching and gives me a laugh when I realise Im not the only one that gets frustrated
Where do the nails go? do they fall off ? I,don't see them falling, thanks in advance . nice work
Bucket underneath
I've had that exact same gun for about 4 years and it still works good , I also have a regular air gun with a ball joint remover to gently pry the boards off, I made one of those pallet busters but being a cripple didn't work too good for me ! hard to use with a walker .
in my chair the air hammer is easier to use thank you for the videos enjoy the turning ones this one is a bonus
That pallet buster is brilliant!
17:34 It says 80-120 PSI right on the box.
i always learn so much from your channel & look forward to each new episode
thanks for sharing!
i spent many an hour pounding out & straightening reused nails for my dad
Thank you! you showed a lot of ways to do it and the air gun was the best for doing a big pile!
That was a educational video sir thank you! I'm thinking of making raised garden beds from pallet wood. Is that what you're making?
Like you, I started with a hammer and a nail bar. Progressed to a wrecking bar and a Burke Bar. Eventually, I built my own pallet buster very much like the one you built. AND, like you, what a time consuming pain in the caboose.
Research: Nail Kicker V20. The price drove me away instantly. But the pain drove me back. I found a used one on Craig's List. You will never regret purchasing one of these. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND these. Instead of pulling the boards off then driving out the nails from the rear, you use the Nail Kicker on the FRONT and drive the nails through the board into the 2x4 stretchers. Often, the board falls off, many times you can use your hand to pull it off, and once in a while, you'll need a pry bar. Having NO NAILS in the boards cuts the break down time more than in half. IF you value your time in dollars, you will off set the purchase price very quickly if you do a reasonable amount of pallets. IF you BURN them for firewood, you will break down many more and the off set is extremely fast. In the time we have used ours, I could have purchased 6 or more Nail Kickers brand new and still be ahead.
Note: The Nail Kickers have 4 different sized heads if I remember correctly. I recommend purchasing 1 or 2 sizes only. Just the sizes you are finding in the pallets you can find. The huge industrial pallets will use larger nails and require the larger size anvils and drive pins. The directions are clear, all tools included, and an oil bottle is supplied with the new ones, although any oil can will work just fine. Add 2-4 drops of oil every 4-8 hours of use. I use more to prevent premature failure of o-rings.
Great videos. I enjoy watching all the videos you post.
THANK YOU!
Recycle, reduce, and reuse! ♻️ Thank you for the inspiration and knowledge!!!
You're great man, I appreciate you making videos. You're very different from a lot of the other wood workers on UA-cam. You make me feel at home being from Texas and all. Yeehaaaw
Nice.
Just like you, I too miss the obvious sometimes. The denailer box has the operating pressure right on it. 😂😂
hi , just ordered the nail punch air tool . I used to sell air tools for Snap On , and always told people to oil the tool at the end of use , couple of drops , run the tool , that means the oil STAYS in the tool whilst its stored and protects it as it cools down which is when the air cools down and turns into water to rust the internals , hope this helps ,
That nail remover seems to work really well. Some off topic questions, why do you have all those rocks on your lawn? And, how do you mow it with the rocks on it?
Was cool that you showed making sure the ground was wet to help prevent a fire from escaping. That's smart. Also I got a chuckle when the fire started and it startled you. I would have had the same reaction. 😂
As a metal detectorist and hobby woodworker. Nails in pallet wood is never a issue. Just get a metaldetector pinpointer probe and nails will never bother you again
I had never heard of this tool to remove nails. Thanks a bunch.
work in a large metal fabrication shop that uses a lot of sheet steel and coils. Most of the pallets that we get in are made of 3x4 solid oak and 1”-1.5” thick oak planks. A lot of it is worth surfacing and using
I bought a pallet buster and that air nailer and absolutely love them. Although my pallets are for odd jobs, these two tools make the process almost fun. My air nailer is set to 95 psi and the force of it pooping out nails is dangerous. I now use a plastic garbage can and lay thick fabric on the bottom of can so the nails don’t ricochet and shot back at me.
18:10 Psst Bro, the box says, 80-120 PSI
I ain't read'n no stink'n box. This ain't a frozen pizza.
@@wortheffort hahaha that's the best excuse ever! Love it
I recycle alot of pallet wood. The pallets i get from where i work are usually 4' by 10' for sheet metal. Planks are usually 1" thick. Usually i use my recip saw and a demo blade, slice between the planks and runners. Then i either pop nail heads out or glue them in depending on project.
I work in a large metal fabrication shop that uses a lot of sheet steel and coils. Most of the pallets that we get in are made of 3x4 solid oak and 1”-1.5” thick oak planks. A lot of it is worth surfacing and using
@Patrick Grate we also arr metal fabricators. Im not sure of all yhe species of wood if found but i know oak, fir, and poplar are common. I also found a reddish color wood i think is alder, not sure. One tip if you dont like nail holes, drill and plug with dowels.
Our nail remover gun came with a swivel air connector. We place the boards directly on the barrel and shoot into it instead of the stool next to the barrel.
I have one great fun to use, it nice to take revenge on all the nails that have fought with over the years. I fire into a drum of water a lot safer then just letting them bounce around. Your video shows a couple flying out of the drum, but these are a great time saver. Loke your video as normal. Thanks Bob
Love that gun - awesome. R u going to run a metal detector across the wood to ensure no metal in there? I harvested palette once. That was enough for me. Thanks for sharing
Nope as in video I explained I’m not smoothing the faces.
Dammit Shawn! I was going to only take a peek at your video and really couldn't stop. It's 1 in the morning and I'm falling asleep. Best regards.
Great video as always. I did think it was funny though about you not finding the pressure and as youre talking about it, its right on the box. Haha. Instructions from overseas are terrible. Looks like it really works great though!
Yep right there!
Yep, don't read the instructions just look at the box.😆
Dang that little pneumatic nail remover is really cool, I hate pallet wood because it takes so long to remove the nails but with that little tool it definitely makes pallet wood a good option for outdoor projects or projects where the surface quality of the project doesn't really matter.
I worked in a warehouse for over 10 years. I've destroyed probably 100,000 pallets and used their wood to heat my garage and polebarn. The pallets with the square blocks in the corners and center are the best pallets period. They always have great wood and are thicker too. Take a sledge hammer and hit the square block. It will knock it right out and you will have flat panels to work with after that. Easy to get the nails out too when you knock the blocks out.
I see a lot of pallets where i work. Every now and then a pallet will come in worth keeping. I have found a couple walnut pallets, a pallet made mostly from quarter sawn oak. But the best one by far was a whole pallet made from curly maple, Even the 3 stringers were curly, some of nicest curl I have seen in person. After cutting the nails out i ended up with about a dozen 1x4x 1/2in pieces that would be nice for drawers or boxes
That pallet buster is an awesome tool! I can almost never pull those nails up without tearing the wood apart. They tend to use twisted nails that don’t pull easily. I cut the slats off of hardwood pallets and use an old hand plane to resurface them. Not may hardwood trees grow up in these northern parts so pallets are one of our only sources of free hardwood.
That pneumatic nail remover is also pretty nifty!
Sweet! I've been drooling over some coiled steel loading pallets we throw away at my place of work
I get so excited to see some nice-looking pallets, old furniture, or some logs that could be milled into usable lumber. To everyone else, they just think I'm weird for getting that excited over some wood.
@@htcinfinity old furniture is my fav. Have to be careful not to tell them that I will be tearing it apart and making something new out of it. Some people think restoration is the only option.
I got one used on Amazon for 40% off the already low price last year, love it, for renovation demolition work, reusing wood when it's still good. I had a white oak pallet with 8/4 sides without cutouts for the forks, and a fiddleback maple pallet with thinner planks I used for drawer fronts because on nice wood I'd rather cut the nail holes out of the picture.
I always enjoy your vids and have learned so much from you. Thanks
The recommended pressure may not be printed in the manual, but it's right there on the front of the box. I guess that kinda counts as the manual, maybe.
Yea 4th bullet 80-120 psi
I like to stack a pile of boards with a lot of weight on it to stop the pallet lifting the bottom two approximately 9 inches in then whilst breaking apart you could fix something to your tree Etc
Great tool!! I noticed that the pressure rating is on Amazon's link you provided at 80 to 120 PSI.
Available at a lower price from other sellers that may not offer free Prime shipping.
Style: Nailer
Air Inlet: 1/4 inch NPT Thread
Operating Pressure: 80-120 PSI
Driver Diameter: 0.16 inch
Removable Nails Range: 10-20 gauge
Thank you for the education on pallet busting. Still shying away from it, but at least it seems less daunting now.
Good information, good video!
Great video as always, i just wanted to respectfully point out that while I'm sure the instructions were terrible and the tool should have had the psi engraved as you pointed out, indeed the operating psi was right on the box in the shot at 17:57 😅
That AirLocker will also work to finish sinking large framing nails as well. Don't use it to drive the nail, use a hammer, but if you get one in a weird spot where you can't get a good swing on the hammer to finish sinking it (like in a corner) this thing works great at driving it the last 1/4 inch.
I make bitdhouses with treated lumber if I have it. Last longer and I don,t have to climb up and replace them. Binds doesn't care
I don't do stuff with pellets as I get enough of those at work but a trick is to use two folklifts. One presses down and the other lifts....
I have got pallets from my work place with great wood! Pallets from Southeast Asia with mahogany 50% good dark wood 20% ok 30% light colored l would not use as l read it has a high silica content. Large pallets from Canada that new machinery was shipped in on quarter sawn pine 2x4x12’ l got two 4x4x45” walnut pieces a number of pieces of oak. The imported pallets are HT. The HT stamp means heat treated, kiln dried to a higher temp for a longer time in order to kill any bugs their eggs or large.
Can I add “live edge” to your rant?
I'm only a minute in, and as a budding woodworker (I'm sure most watchers of your channel are) I couldn't agree more. I never understand why people buy that stuff. Apparently it sells well, but I would be so much more fulfilled and happy making things that are truly beautiful. Solid joinery, nice clean finish, let the natural wood express it's natural beauty. Just my two cents, but I'm glad you - as an "influencer" in the realm of WWing say this.
That Pneumatic gun is a game changer. I gave up on pallets because of the PITA factor
Awesome job and info... unlike you I have to use as much free or very cheap as I can ...but then again I don't make nearly as nice of stuff as you. And I have learned so much from you... basically all I know about grain I learned from you! And it has really helped me in my carving skills.... thanks for sharing your knowledge with all of us lowly nubies ! It really helps...
Grabbed one of those for $40 back when lumber was way up, paid for itself on the first batch of reclaimed framing material that would have otherwise been tossed because of the time and frustration of pulling them manually
great idea!
I recently found a possible source of really nice reclaimed wood. I got pieces of a family heirloom piano. It was called 'untuneable' so not even something my sis could donate to anybody. So, a very large, VERY heavy paperweight. I didn't know until we started to dismantle it, but the front panel is a solid slab of gorgeous birdseye maple without a flaw. The keyboard cover is oak. I'm thinking of making coasters from the keys (since the thing is over a hundred years old there may be issues, though, if the white keys are actually ivory.) I want to re-use as much as possible and give my grandmother's piano a second life. My sis wants to turn the inner strings into a water feature. People are GIVING old pianos away.Once I get my shop set up better I am going to have to look in to how to transport the heavy bastards. Until then, pallets. I just this week got an Air Locker and totally agree. Use eye protection always - those nails zing all over the place. Also, don't burn the scrap wood! I am bagging up small pieces for kindling and larger broken pieces for camp wood. Have you SEEN what they charge for camp wood? When I get excess I can probably sell that too!
Piano's from before the 50's are most interesting. We use the black keys (many were pure ebony) for accents, pens and such. And much of the panels are actually wide boards not glue ups. Seems after the 50's veneers came into vogue and are less versatile in reuse. Armours are same way.
I used to get a lot of the 8 ft pallets at work, and I'd just save the 2x4's. They're normally twisted and/or warped but I used them for thinks like chicken coops and frames for things around the homestead. My wife had learned that I don't do pintrest pallet creations. Lol
thank you for sayiing "get go". I hate to hear people say "Gecko"
Pallet splitters can be brought, possibly called floor board lifters, a flat recking bars are better than 'round' ones, a good pair of pliers are useful in straighting nails before driving them out.
Don't forget the eye protection too. Saw a few ricochets.
I ended up crinkling up some packing paper and putting it in the barrel. That stopped all the "bounce". Coulda sworn I filmed and put it in the video. But I guess it got lost somehow.
One trick I found. Once you get the bottom boards off, with the top boards down, stand on the pallet and hit the sides of the blocks or stringers with a sledge hammer.
Not a super fan of distress furniture. However, I have seen some nicely done. About the nails is a great tool if you are using pallets very like myself. Thy for sharing.
interesting video, thanks for posting.
Here is my suggestion, which eliminates most of the work. Use a dowel making bit to drill down around every nail. The nail cones out with the dowel. Fix the hole later as part of the project, but only to the degree necessary to keep the needed esthetics of
each project .
Best thing I Have seen was a band saw.
They just pushed the pallet through the saw blade it cut the nails custom built i was jealous
Use airlock shooting nails out into a 5 gal bucket with a little water in it. Much safer and nail tended to stay in the bucket. Less to find with magnet.
For me I found it much faster to use recip saw with metal cutting blade - slide blade between boards and cut nails - can disassemble a pallet in less than a min - then punch the nails.
As I have said before, I use a lot of pallets so when I cannot get my pallet buster in, I use a bottle jack to prise one of the boards off.
Love my Airlocker !
I'm fully with you on the whole 'distressed' furniture shtick... I spent many years learning fine cabinetry and working at a master craft level. That fake fustic stuff just hurts my eyes and irritates my soul...
Different pallets require different tools and a little thought. Some are easy and others have so many nails or staples that it takes a lot of time. Any rebuilt pallet has probably got cut off nails and that makes milling them properly impossible. Look for the specialty pallets that have added wood for some special purpose, they have more usable wood.
Damn that was awesome!
Look at the bricklayers in the construction sites. They have to get stronger pallets to hold the bricks. I found a lot in oak. (I know ! Oak ! ) Yeah.
I've found a good technique to save the whole plank on the top and bottom. You put a 2x4 in the same side of the one inside the pallets. Then, you place something under the 2x4 that is trespassing the pallets and then just hammer the 2x4 that is from the pallet. It'll give a even surface under the planks so it don't crack in pieces and... I mean it's easy and you always have spare 2x4 so... ;)
The pneumatic nail pusher is a taker. 50 $ well invested. I'll watch to buy one.
I liked the video. It confirms what I know.
I too had seen one of these being used to break down pallets, and for the priceIwas willing to try it out, assuming that if it worked for me the way it did in that video, the savings of aggravation would be well worth the price tag. Well…to be honest… I don’t regret a single dollar of its price, and I had a freaking blast blasting 💥nails out of a huge pile of wood. If I hadn’t pulled a double as soon as I got to the woodpile (stepped on two nails at the same time about an inch away from each other 😖 🤕 ), then it might have been a perfect day breaking down pallet wood.
Hi Shawn, please check how the wood was treated and what was it was used to transport. Some pallets were treated with quite nasty chemicals and/or have been used to transport these, in case of doubt wear a mask while working with them. Might be paranoid, but I'd rather err on the safe side of things and see a lot more of your videos than the opposite, cheers. :-)
Covered that in video.
@@wortheffort oh, sorry then, must've missed it, ears failing me nowadays.
thanks for the tips
I want one of those tools! I don't need it, but I want it 🤣🤣
OMG Magazine tetanus injectors! LOL When you were talking about not having the psi operating pressure, the box had it right on the front. LOL That's something I would miss as well. I think that denailer is a great tool.
It must be a regional thing because all the local pallets I get are very heavy solid oak without knots. The nails hold on for dear life while trying to rip them apart. 3/4 thick boards and the side boards are oak too.
The only time I see pallets of an inferior wood is when they came in from out of state.
We lost 100's of thousands of Ash trees here in Iowa to the Emerald Ash Borer insect. Seemed like a waste to see healthy trees cut down and burned to try and stop the spread. Those trees could have been used for pallets if nothing else.
use them for pallets and you risk sending that plague all over the world.
@@KipdoesStuff Do you really think mankind can kill every breeding pair of Emerald Ash Borer on the planet? If we were that talented the mosquito and cockroach would have been eliminated decades ago.
To think like that is like believing a mask can stop Covid and there's zero data to prove those did anything at all!
The working pressure is on the box even I can read it on the screen from other side of the Atlantic
You would cry knowing about what ive gotten for free and simply turned into firewood 😂
Pallets make great strawberry towers.
Um, the operating pressure was literally printed on the front of the box.
DANGER: many pallets are treated with a toxic insecticide called methyl bromide. Most treated pallets are stamped with an 'MB' on a side board, but is it worth the risk to have this in your projects? Not to mention the danger from breathing it in (airborne dust) when machining the wood. It's also toxic when burned (the smoke).
Discussed in video that you didn't watch.
This was a killer good video. You just saved me a hell of a lot of time. Thank You
Air pressure level is on the box in the shot when you are talking about what the air pressure should be🤦🤣🤣 didn't have the research past looking at the box🤣🤣
You’re welcome to have your own opinion, don’t get me wrong. There’s also some people that thought the Pontiac Aztec looked good. As we say in the south, Bless yall’s heart!
Copy/pasted bot statement of no relevance to subject?
Natural patina is good.
That fake stuff looks awful. Won't have it in my house.
Why would you pee people off, it's just what you like, I'm opposite to you, but that's ok, it's what makes the world interesting place, if everyone liked the same thing, that would be a boring life,
I subbed, awesome stuff
An alternative to using a sawsall to cut the nails shorter for easier hammering is a heavy-duty large bolt cutter. Tedious but a little safer than a sawsall.
Not a fan of salad either apparently
Dude, looks like it might be time now to give up the sugar and pies ,cakes and cookies, just saying.
I don't eat that stuff. Also, mind your own business.
LMAO
When you breath in you sound like you smoke. just an observation.
Never have. Too cheap. Dont drink either. I’ll assume you’re by nature a rude insecure individual because this is something you’d never say to a strangers face but in anonymous comment sections….
@@wortheffort Incorrect, I'd say it straight to your face.
@@skyeditor1740liar too huh?
@@wortheffort wow, we got ourselves a woodturning tough guy, LOL
@@skyeditor1740 Nah, I just don't believe for a second you've ever gotten in the face of a stranger for no reason to insult their voice. People who troll online just aren't the type.
I’ll bet your building a dog house.
But here you are using it…lol. I hate it but I use it. Pick a side dude