At Precision Trim we do interior detail and exterior as well, such as paint chip repair, scratch removal, graphics, headlight restoration, and liquid wrap
I just wanted to kind of go over some of the features of this Milwaukee M18 straight 18 gauge brad nailer and I just picked this up. I've got quite a bit of trim work to do in this build site that we're doing and I'm hanging some casing right now some door trim and just kind of wanted to go over some of the features of this. So it is an M18 which means it will take all the M18 batteries that you have and in this case I'm using the forge. Super long eight hour, eight amp hour batteries so this is going to last the entire time I'm on the job. One thing that is nice it does have an on off button and if you push that and hold it you're going to shut it off, push it and hold it again, you're going to turn it on, push it again and you're going to get the multi mode here so if you can push that then that's going to give you multiple which means all you have to do is squeeze the trigger and every time you engage it's going to you don't have to pull the trigger again so that's kind of a nice feature and then it just has the regular style here but a couple of the nice features does hold a full sleeve well bigger than the two inch brads here that I'm using. It does have a depth gauge which will allow you to change how far you counter sink these and it's all pretty well spelled out here how you do it and then that the only knock I would have on it is especially with this high amp hour battery it does get a little heavy, no question about that there are lighter ones but really what you're looking for in a brad nailer is consistency you want to be able to hit that brad when you'ready and not have to worry about