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Tools and Hardware Reviews of Cooper Group 56 Nail PullerCustomer Review: Can You LIVE Without It ?? Summary: 5 StarsDrive a 16d with an air powered framing nailer. If you don't like it, pull it right out with this. Any other bar or pliers will make a big old mess on your material. The way an air nailer countersinks a nail, you have to get below the surface of the wood. This tool does that, with a lift of the handle, then a firm slam down. Then when you rock it back onto the foot, the nail is pinched tighter than any thing else can pinch without cutting the nail. Keep a steady pull on the handle and the nail WILL come out. Amazing. Old ideas are still sometimes the best ideas.
Customer Review: Rebuilding a fence? Summary: 5 StarsThis is one of the great tools my dad had. Besides being a cantankerous old coot, dad was a farmer, machinist, tool and die maker, airframe mechanic and general expert with his hands, tools and machinery. He always had the best tools. If he couldn't buy it, he'd make it. Roughly forty years have passed since I last used dad's nail puller; but, when something works well, I tend to remember it. My back fence recently moved to the top of my honeydo list when my wife decided she wanted every other picket removed. She wanted to better enjoy the view and yet keep wandering kids out of our pool. Exasperated with the splintered mess I was making of the redwood with the Roughneck, Superbar and similar nail pullers available at the local hardware stores; I began searching for a puller like dad had. Luckily, I only had to go half way across the country to find it. The Cooper 56 appears to be the same excellent tool I used on dad's fence forty years ago.
Customer Review: Rebuilding a fence? Summary: 5 StarsThis is one of the great tools my dad had. Besides being a cantankerous old coot, dad was a farmer, machinist, tool and die maker, airframe mechanic and general expert with his hands, tools and machinery. He always had the best tools. If he couldn't buy it, he'd make it. Roughly forty years have passed since I last used dad's nail puller; but, when something works well, I tend to remember it. My back fence recently moved to the top of my honeydo list when my wife decided she wanted every other picket removed. She wanted to better enjoy the view and yet keep wandering kids out of our pool. Exasperated with the splintered mess I was making of the redwood with the Roughneck, Superbar and similar nail pullers available at the local hardware stores; I began searching for a puller like dad had. Luckily, I only had to go half way across the country to find it. The Cooper 56 appears to be the same excellent tool I used on dad's fence forty years ago.
Customer Review: A NAIL PULLER WORTH EVERY PENNY Summary: 5 StarsI have always wanted one of these nail pullers, now after years of searching through hardware and home improvement stores never able to find one, my search has come to an end. This model may not be as sturdy as the older models, but this nail puller is more than adequite for most people. All claw type nail pullers rely on the head of the nail being in tact or relatively close to the surface of the wood. Though your first impression may be that this tool is a bit pricey, it can save the do-it-yourselfers a lot of time and frustration. One Caution: While using this tool, make sure you have the jaws in place directly over the nail head. My father has broken two of the old models my grandfather gave him by having the jaws to the left or right of the nail head.
Customer Review: The best nail puller on the market Summary: 5 StarsI dad had one of these that his dad gave him. I couldn't wait so I bought it myself. This is the only nail puller that really works. It will pull any nail with little damage to the wood, it will pull small finishing nail to the largest spikes. Dont waste your money or effort on any other puller than this one. It has the durability to be handed down generation after generation.
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