OP's just that bad at hammering.![]()
Yes but the advantage is that you can turn the screw and adjust the depth. Handy for tile backsplash.I saw those but those were 4 bucks a pop and my cheap one was only .68 cents. I got a budget to meet!
Some side nail boxes also have angled screw holes inside the box to further secure it to the stud.The .68 cent nailed box actually is pretty solid with the bent nail. That's why I left it.
There's a fix for that in tight spots! I bought a palm nailer in the middle of a remodel where I was doing a bunch of blocking between floor joists in a 1965 rambler. I break it out anytime I'm forced to nail something in tight spaces.OP's just that bad at hammering.![]()
I do not think our local Lowes sells these anymore.
It was harder than pine but wasn't that hard in 1900. It gets harder as it ages.My last house was built in 1900. It had actual 2x4 studs. They were definitely not pine. I am not sure what kind of wood, I suspect oak from the looks of them. They were like steel. Only way to drive a nail was to pre-drill or use a nail gun. I was driving a 16p nail, only pre-drilled an inch, and that was all it would go in. Never bent, just stopped and would not go any further. Probably hit it an extra 10 times, never budged. I assume they hardened over time, no idea how they would have build it back in 1900 if everything was that hard.
I don't know what you mean by any real weight but I figured about 250 lbs where the truss ride on them with no snow load. It did have some diagonal braces but for years one side brace was loose and not doing anything. I put an LVL header underneath (just one 1.75 x 12) to give it some strength when framing in for a garage door. The other side of shed has the same 2 2x8's spanning over 16 ft and one cripple coming down to a sistered in 2x10 which also supports a 14 ft wide lean to roof rafters. That's getting a wall put up with full length studs.Hope that header isn't supporting any real weight
That's a far larger span than I would do with 2x8, but if you have no snow load and you are happy with it, send it.I don't know what you mean by any real weight but I figured about 250 lbs where the truss ride on them with no snow load. It did have some diagonal braces but for years one side brace was loose and not doing anything. I put an LVL header underneath (just one 1.75 x 12) to give it some strength when framing in for a garage door. The other side of shed has the same 2 2x8's spanning over 16 ft and one cripple coming down to a sistered in 2x10 which also supports a 14 ft wide lean to roof rafters. That's getting a wall put up with full length studs.
I've done that with poplar and it's not "good" wood.Old wood is so much better than new stuff. That's why the shed I'm rebuilding got by with 2 2x8 headers over 16 ft openings.
Pro tip, the 2x4's at the box stores at the same as the 2x4's at your beloved local lumber yardIt is funny you show that bent nail. Over the winter I built a typical 2x4 wall in our basement to create a lockable storage room. I put in a couple of boxes like that for outlets and a wall switch. Of course I needed to move one of them and couldn't believe how easy it was to pull the nail out. I was able to grab the head w/ a pair of vise grips, twist back and forth while pulling and out it came in maybe 15 seconds. Yeah new wood isn't much especially box store 2x4s.
