#9,526 in Tools & Home Improvement
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Reddit mentions of Shark Corp 21-2020 7-5/8-Inch Nail Puller

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of Shark Corp 21-2020 7-5/8-Inch Nail Puller. Here are the top ones.

Shark Corp 21-2020 7-5/8-Inch Nail Puller
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All SharkGrip nail pullers and prybars are forged from the finest heat-treated Japanese alloy steelThe pulling "V" is hardened to a Rockwell 50-52 hardness, then hand-finished for accuracyThe resulting tool is so strong it can even bite into hardened and stainless steel nailsHandles nails from 3 to 6 pennyMade from the finest Japanese steelCats-paw designOne-year warrantee
Specs:
Height1 Inches
Length9 Inches
Number of items1
SizePack of 1
Weight0.14 Pounds
Width3 Inches

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Found 1 comment on Shark Corp 21-2020 7-5/8-Inch Nail Puller:

u/gmkoliver ยท 3 pointsr/Carpentry

Hey that's awesome! Congrats.

I don't think the 22 is too heavy, but it needs to be smooth faced. That's basically what I have.

A plane is very handy, I would get a low angle block plane (maybe that's what /u/Guyrannosaurus_Tex meant in his comment). However a crappy block plane might be worse than no plane at all IMO. The Stanley is decent but I wouldn't go lower than that price-wise. You want the low-angle for trimming end grain. Not absolutely necessary but a lot easier. I use it a lot when I'm running trim and need a quick adjustment and don't want to go back to the saw. A smaller one will be handier (more portable) than a big one. My go-to is actually this guy, https://www.lie-nielsen.com/product/small-block-planes. But I think the Stanley or similar is fine to start. You have to keep it sharp though.

For other tools besides what Tex mentioned, a pair of diagonal or end-nipper pliers, a small cats paw (the Japanese style is nice for finish work (like this https://www.amazon.com/Shark-Corp-21-2020-8-Inch-Puller/dp/B00004TBQE/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1468101411&sr=8-1&keywords=japanese+cats+paw), a scribe (like this https://www.amazon.com/General-Tools-843-Compass-Scriber/dp/B00004T7R8/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1468101493&sr=8-1&keywords=pencil+scribe), a few chisels (a 1/4" and a 1/2" will probably be most versatile to start), a chalk line (blue chalk). and perhaps a stud finder.

Most of all, look at what your co-workers have. That'll be your best clue to what's useful in the type of work you do. Good luck!

edit: Hey, there's one other tool you should get -- the habit of constantly learning :) - check this site out, http://www.thisiscarpentry.com/