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use a siding nailer as mentioned by joe.. the nail has to be flush with the face.. only siding nailers have nails with a thin enough head to do this

the harti nails for framing guns have a much thicker head.. if you set the head flush with the siding it will crack the siding
 
use a siding nailer as mentioned by joe.. the nail has to be flush with the face.. only siding nailers have nails with a thin enough head to do this

the harti nails for framing guns have a much thicker head.. if you set the head flush with the siding it will crack the siding
While the siding gun is nice, the framing gun can also work if used correctly. We have used it on several Hardi jobs with no issues.
 
From the Hardie site;
BLIND NAILING
Nails - Wood Framing
• Siding nail (0.09" shank x 0.221" HD x 2" long)
• 11ga. roofing nail (0.121" shank x 0.371" HD x 1.25" long)




FACE NAILING
Nails - Wood Framing
• 6d (0.113" shank x 0.267" HD x 2" long)
• Siding nail (0.09” shank x 0.221” HD x 2” long)


Don't shoot the messenger, lol. From; http://www.jameshardie.com/pdf/install/hardieplank-hz5.pdf Hz10 is the same, both cover the U.S.

Gary
 
Discussion starter · #9 ·
Gary, was this for me? I have that document, thanks. Wanting to see what others are successfully using to insert the nails with.

Thanks





From the Hardie site;
BLIND NAILING
Nails - Wood Framing
• Siding nail (0.09" shank x 0.221" HD x 2" long)
• 11ga. roofing nail (0.121" shank x 0.371" HD x 1.25" long)




FACE NAILING
Nails - Wood Framing
• 6d (0.113" shank x 0.267" HD x 2" long)
• Siding nail (0.09” shank x 0.221” HD x 2” long)


Don't shoot the messenger, lol. From; http://www.jameshardie.com/pdf/install/hardieplank-hz5.pdf Hz10 is the same, both cover the U.S.

Gary
 
For anyone! I use a siding gun, Joe linked it. Carrying a framing gun when doing siding is heavy on the arm and nail belt as it hangs there when not in use.... bad enough to use when framing (37 years)- like apples to oranges in weight/ease of use/time wasted loading/magazine capacity/nail placement/built in exposure gauge/closeness to board end without blow-out corners- just no comparison, (been-there-done-that) IMO. Depends on if you want the siding product warranty.

Gary
 
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For anyone! I use a siding gun, Joe linked it. Carrying a framing gun when doing siding is heavy on the arm and nail belt as it hangs there when not in use.... bad enough to use when framing (37 years)- like apples to oranges in weight/ease of use/time wasted loading/magazine capacity/nail placement/built in exposure gauge/closeness to board end without blow-out corners- just no comparison, (been-there-done-that) IMO. Depends on if you want the siding product warranty.

Gary
Been there, done that also! But only for 30 years. In my opinion, a framing gun is a lot more versatile for a homeowner than a siding gun. I also never hang any gun from my tool belt. A framing nailer is an acceptable nailer according to James Hardie.
 
I use my siding nailer for building slat fences, installing 1 X 4 and 1 X 6 exterior trim, vinyl lumber, building bird houses ECT.
 
im with joe.. a framing gun is for FRAMING. siding nailers are for siding, putting on fence boards. underlay and other things..

the framing gun is just too aggresive and hte nails have too heavy gauge a head which DO crack the siding far worse and much more often than the siding nailer. ive installed countless panels of the stuff and the siding nailer has been the least worrysome.. ive hand nailed with roofing nails.. used a roofing gun along with even screwing it on a commercial job where we had to fasten to heavy gauge steel studs

as for blind nailing 8" im pretty sure it wont be covered by warrenty if you nail it that way. it has to be face nailed.. theyve had issues with heavy winds blowing it off so now only the 5" exposure harti can be blind nailed
 
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