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Modern oak plank nail removal

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Subject Author Date
Modern oak plank nail removal Kunta Kinte 11-10-2007
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Posted by Kunta Kinte on November 10, 2007, 11:20 am
I took up some 1.5" mid-60s oak plank flooring for re-use. The nails
are slightly edge-serrated, fairly soft and most remain in the tongue
fully set with the business end having a slow bend. The heads are
L-shaped. because of the L I can't pull them. The bend and the
softness make reverse hammering them pretty impractical.

Is my only option to dremel them and beware during re-installation?
thanks for any ideas, Bryan

I've put three jpgs up at:
http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg

Posted by willshak on November 10, 2007, 11:57 am
on 11/10/2007 11:20 AM Kunta Kinte said the following:
> I took up some 1.5" mid-60s oak plank flooring for re-use. The nails
> are slightly edge-serrated, fairly soft and most remain in the tongue
> fully set with the business end having a slow bend. The heads are
> L-shaped. because of the L I can't pull them. The bend and the
> softness make reverse hammering them pretty impractical.
>
> Is my only option to dremel them and beware during re-installation?
> thanks for any ideas, Bryan
>
> I've put three jpgs up at:
> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
>
All three links give a 'Page not Found'. Besides, the 3 links are for
one image (oaknailhead.jpg)

--

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
To email, remove the double zeroes after @

Posted by Edward Hennessey on November 10, 2007, 12:25 pm

> on 11/10/2007 11:20 AM Kunta Kinte said the following:
>> I took up some 1.5" mid-60s oak plank flooring for re-use. The nails
>> are slightly edge-serrated, fairly soft and most remain in the tongue
>> fully set with the business end having a slow bend. The heads are
>> L-shaped. because of the L I can't pull them. The bend and the
>> softness make reverse hammering them pretty impractical.
>>
>> Is my only option to dremel them and beware during re-installation?
>> thanks for any ideas, Bryan
>>
>> I've put three jpgs up at:
>> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
>> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
>> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
>>
> All three links give a 'Page not Found'. Besides, the 3 links are for one
> image (oaknailhead.jpg)

I can't see you pictures either, so I conjecture two interpretations of
your problem. If bending when
hitting the long, exposed sharp end of your nails is the problem, cut the
sharp end shorter with some nippers
to the point where it won't bend when struck and hammer it then to raise the
L head for pulling.
If the sharp end is not exposed, try hammering with a nail punch to drive it
back up.
Finally, use a small wonder bar on a fulcral piece of scrap wood to avoid
marring the planks
when pulling the L head or if the nail bends with that method, bite into the
shank with nippes or try a small vice grip to twist and pull the fastener.
You might try lubricating the nail with some spray to facilitate removal but
it is worth noting that removing any nail with flutes or barbs from wood is
difficult and , at the least, will be destructive to the surrounding
material.

Regards,

Edward Hennessey



Posted by Mike Paulsen on November 12, 2007, 3:09 pm
Kunta Kinte wrote:
> I took up some 1.5" mid-60s oak plank flooring for re-use. The nails
> are slightly edge-serrated, fairly soft and most remain in the tongue
> fully set with the business end having a slow bend. The heads are
> L-shaped. because of the L I can't pull them. The bend and the
> softness make reverse hammering them pretty impractical.
>
> Is my only option to dremel them and beware during re-installation?
> thanks for any ideas, Bryan
>
> I've put three jpgs up at:
> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg
> http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg

Your links all point to:
http://mountcrumpit.com\images\oaknailhead.jpg/

the correct URL would be:
http://mountcrumpit.com/images/oaknailhead.jpg

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