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Reply To: | A man of honor pays his debts with his own money. --DeGaulle |
Date: | Mon, 5 Jul 2004 19:56:11 -0400 |
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Met History wrote:
>> I would lean towards the "not split wood" reason as the cut nail tends
>> to rip and cut through the wood whereas the wire nail spreads it.
>
> so how does this actually happen? i mean, the cut nail displaces the
> wood, just as the wire nail does. even more. so why doesn't that
> spread the adjacent little long line-y things, whatever you call them,
> capillaries or something? c
Cutting through is different than splitting. The action of the nail
cutting not to be confused with the means of cut nail manufacture. The
flat end/point, as I understand it, cuts through the cells of the wood
rather than spreading them. Leastways this is what my grandfather
advised me was his objection to wire nails. A wire nail is pointed and
as it enters the wood it spreads the cells. The cut nail puts less
stress on the cells... I suppose pushing the cut cells ahead of it as it
is pounded into the hole. Not to be confused with any reference to...
HC's latest hobby.
A cut nail being flat in one direction it would not continue to displace
wood in the particular direction once it got started... so a carpenter
in effect could line up the flat to be parallel to the grain,
particularly for a nail placed close into an edge. As I remember it cut
nails were always supposed to be used for setting hardwood flooring. In
that I think it also had to co with a cut nail being less pliable than a
wire nail and able to be hammered in without turning into a worm splat.
Process and technique of nailing is an important skill. I'm always
amazed at how many timid people choke their hammers short. Using a
hammer requires intention and an expectation of success in going all for
it. Halfway measures with a hammer rarely make much of an impression.
][<
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