Guys, you missed the OP's question. He wants it for framing and roofing. Nail guns are designed with enough air capacity in the handle that the flow through the line is immaterial. If you put a valve on a nail gun's input, and pressurized it and then shut the valve, it would fire one nail. The line just needs to bring the gun back up to pressure before you need to fire the next nail. 100' of 1/4" line is regularly used by roofers.
Roofers especially like 1/4" line because it's super light and is less likely to damage shingles.
My favorite 1/4" line that I own is a 50' Amflo I got at HD when it went on clearance for $5. I believe it has been replaced by this:
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Amflo-1-...e-with-Field-Repairable-Ends-14-100/202205320
What I'd suggest you look for are the following features:
Polyurethane (stays flexible in all weather conditions)
Translucent line with a nylon mesh inside (I've had pure polyurethane coil hoses blow out after years in service. Never seen that with a line that's got mesh; translucent means you can see if you have water issues).
Plastic strain reliefs on the ends. (The ends are the first places that fail, but also the tapered plastic strain relief make it less likely for your quick connects to get snagged on something).