Not to hijack, but what kind of adhesive do you recommend? I may be putting up some foam board in a detached block building this spring. The ceiling and wood framed walls are insulated, but the exterior block walls need something.
I am using the drill that came with the Tapcons. I checked and it is the right size, 3/16 for a 1/4" Tapcon. Half the time they would strip out and still not flush with the board. They would strip just as the head was starting to dimple the board or sooner. If I tried the 5/32 drill they would stall out or snap off. I do suspect all CMU's are not the same.If your tapcons are stripping out, you are either overdriving them or using the wrong size masonry drill bit. And some brands come with the right drill bit in the package.
I drove a lot in my grill island project, into concrete-filled CMUs, but they were temporary for form work for casting the concrete counter in place. They worked great for me. I screwed the innermost layer of OSB strips to the walls, then screwed the other layers into the 1st until I built up a 3" overhang. Lot of weight of concrete went into that counter pour, all the strain in the forms screws was in shear. Everything stayed solid for weeks until I pulled the forms off.
I was using mostly the 3" screws with the torx heads.
....... also don't over tighten the screws. snug is good
If your tapcons are stripping out, you are either overdriving .............
And what about the ones that snapped or stalled before they got to that point? The 2x's are a bit soft, saw no need to countersink. And then, I did discover that the 3/16 Tapcons were not holding that well either. I can't resist doing a test. I could pull a board off fairly easily with the Tapcons, but try to get one off with the two methods described earlier? I had to cut the heads off the nails with an abrasive cut off wheel. Not only does my method work, but it is cheaper and faster. And I already had Thousands of the power nails and only short a few of the 20d's. Got a lot done today.ahh. trying to countersink the head without drilling the wood for it ...
there lies your issue.
Grandson came to help me today He was working on installing the 2x's on top of the foam. He inadvertently installed one of the2x's on the wrong mark. I got my nail puller, grabbed ahold of the nail(20d), extended the handle and hung on it lifting my weight off the floor. Trying further I lifted myself and dropped my weight hard.I did this several times. I weigh less than 180 and grandson comes in at 195. but I declined his offer to try the same thing. I guess the 2x4 stays, I'll install another next to it. We did finish all the exterior studs. I will use the 3/16 Tapcons to secure bottom plates. Thats all folks!And what about the ones that snapped or stalled before they got to that point? The 2x's are a bit soft, saw no need to countersink. And then, I did discover that the 3/16 Tapcons were not holding that well either. I can't resist doing a test. I could pull a board off fairly easily with the Tapcons, but try to get one off with the two methods described earlier? I had to cut the heads off the nails with an abrasive cut off wheel. Not only does my method work, but it is cheaper and faster. And I already had Thousands of the power nails and only short a few of the 20d's. Got a lot done today.
More can be learned from failures than successes
Just get the hex ones and counterbore if you need it flush. Hate the phillips.I had very good success with tapcons, hammer drill, and impact drill this summer. I don't recall sizes but got drill size as called out on tap on box.
Never tried screw gun, but I do wonder about enough stuff to do the job when an impact driver stalls out somtimes.what about those drive pins with the nail to set
secret with tap con, use a screw gun, go in steady and fast, just a couple second, dont try to retighten, dont go slow. once it set, leave it alone
3/16 Tapcons are fine laterally I believe in concrete such as securing 2x's to floor, but for tall walls in my barn I used Redheads.I find that 3/16 tapcons don't hold all the well in many cases . 1/4" are much more robust
