Friday, January 11

 

Improved nail puller

The Nail Extractor for pulling nails and staplesPull brittle old nails.
Pull pesky wire staples.
Pull pneumatic fasteners.

The jaws increase pressure throughout stroke, gripping the entire exposed length of the fastener.

The Nail Extractor is drop forged of the same steel used in the jaws of bolt-cutters and all 22 teeth are induction hardened to the Rockwell hardness of high grade wire cutters.

Jeff Wagner's Nail ExtractorJeff Wagner's invention of The Nail Extractor could earn a "Time Saver Award" on every jobsite, especially removing electrical wire staples.

About $25 from Jefferson Tool.

6 Comments:

At November 24, 2008 6:10 AM, Blogger Axxman said...

Look at the Nail Jack and the totally different Nail Hunter if you want to DIG a nail staple or brad!

 
At November 24, 2008 1:17 PM, Blogger Brian Hayes said...

With the compound handle and extra length, the Nail Extractor grabs tight and accomplishes its goals. But a dedicated tool for lighter gauge work is needed too.

Thanks for introducing the Nail Jack. This new tool will help many crafts.

Smart tools are needed. We've relied on the 'commoditization' of tools too long. Nail Jack will help the 'green demolition' movement too.

p.s. To reach all potential buyers, a non-Flash version version of your site would help. :-)

 
At November 24, 2008 1:23 PM, Blogger Axxman said...

Thank you very much Brian! Actually, the Nail Jack is a hard core 11 inch tool for demolition, or, as I would prefer, "responsible deconstruction". The smaller Nail Hunter, at 8.5 inches, is for everyone's kitchen drawer. May I send you a never seen version? I am just getting the first 20 tomorrow. Would love your input. We are buying a manufacturing facility hopefully VERY soon, for a return to the Made in USA pride.

 
At November 24, 2008 1:24 PM, Blogger Axxman said...

Oh, and were you on the www.nailjack.com website? I don't think there's any flash on that one....

 
At November 24, 2008 1:39 PM, Blogger Brian Hayes said...

Wull, I should be smarter and keep my nose out of stuff. I clicked a couple times on what I thought were buttons. When nothing happened, I made the wrong assumption the site used Flash.

I'll be glad to help Nail Jack, but I'm not in the 'review business' anymore.

I think Nail Jack and Nail Hunter deserve a place in every tool store and every tool kit.

Far too many folks damage top-quality material because we haven't paid attention to 'deconstruction'.

 
At November 24, 2008 1:41 PM, Blogger Axxman said...

Send me your address, and we'll get you one this week. No review necessary, just go pull stuff!

 

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