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Is it just me or does everyone have problems with the available caulking guns on the market? Want to talk about carpal tunnel syndrome…or maybe it’s “window installer’s cramp”? “Right hand could crush a Volkswagen” is usually used in another context but that’s what the pro’s must have developed.
I’m looking for a better solution. I’ve tried AEG’s cordless gun which was guardedly OK but collapsed after a couple of years. I see Milwaukee are now producing a cordless gun but it’s 2.2 volts! Sheesh! That’s OK for a toy. Whatever happened to 110V with a cord?
At one stage in the dim distant past I had a Black & Decker rinky-dink compressor with an attached gun which unlike the cordless type worked on the basis of completely enclosing the caulk tube except for the nozzle and forcing the caulk out by air pressure. I have a feeling that this type might work OK with pro-level quality equipment but I don’t see anything advertised.
Any suggestions appreciated.
Replies
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Is it just me or does everyone have problems with the available caulking guns on the market? Want to talk about carpal tunnel syndrome...or maybe it's "window installer's cramp"? "Right hand could crush a Volkswagen" is usually used in another context but that's what the pro's must have developed.
I'm looking for a better solution. I've tried AEG's cordless gun which was guardedly OK but collapsed after a couple of years. I see Milwaukee are now producing a cordless gun but it's 2.2 volts! Sheesh! That's OK for a toy. Whatever happened to 110V with a cord?
At one stage in the dim distant past I had a Black & Decker rinky-dink compressor with an attached gun which unlike the cordless type worked on the basis of completely enclosing the caulk tube except for the nozzle and forcing the caulk out by air pressure. I have a feeling that this type might work OK with pro-level quality equipment but I don't see anything advertised.
Any suggestions appreciated.