Different Sizes the Concrete Nails From China Customised Brand
- Loading Port:
- Shanghai
- Payment Terms:
- TT OR LC
- Min Order Qty:
- 25 m.t.
- Supply Capability:
- 25000000 m.t./month
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Specification
1. Different Sizes the Concrete Nails From China Customised Brand Description:
First Class Nail Customization is welcome . We could produce various Common Nail.
according to buyers’drawing or samples/Non-standard Nails .The price, picture
and product attributes are for reference only. Specific matter can be confirmed
by a further communication. Welcome your consultation.
2.Main Features of Different Sizes the Concrete Nails From China Customised Brand:
specification: BWG9X2.5"
material: iron
length: 2.5"
head diameter: 20mm
shank diameter: 3.8mm
surface treatment: Electro-galvanized
color: galvanized-shining
package: gunny bag, 50kgs, 24kgs, 25kgs per bag, meet customers' requirement
3. Different Sizes the Concrete Nails From China Customised BrandImages
4. Different Sizes the Concrete Nails From China Customised Brand Specification
Common nails Specification | |||
Specification | Length (mm) | Rod diameter(mm) | Head diameter(mm) |
bwg8*2" | 50.8 | 4.19 | 20 |
bwg8*2-1/2" | 63.5 | 4.19 | 20 |
bwg8*3" | 76.2 | 4.19 | 20 |
bwg9*1-1/2" | 38 | 3.73 | 20 |
bwg9*2" | 50.8 | 3.73 | 20 |
bwg9*2-1/2" | 63.5 | 3.73 | 20 |
bwg9*3" | 76.2 | 3.73 | 20 |
bwg10*1-3/4" | 44.5 | 3.37 | 20 |
bwg10*2" | 50.8 | 3.37 | 20 |
bwg10*2-1/2" | 63.5 | 3.37 | 20 |
bwg11*1-1/2" | 38 | 3.02 | 18 |
bwg11*1-3/4" | 44.5 | 3.02 | 18 |
bwg11*2" | 50.8 | 3.02 | 18 |
bwg11*2-1/2" | 63.5 | 3.02 | 18 |
bwg12*1-1/2" | 38 | 2.74 | 18 |
bwg12*1-3/4" | 44.5 | 2.74 | 18 |
bwg12*2" | 50.8 | 2.74 | 18 |
bwg13*1 1/2" | 38 | 2.38 | 15 |
bwg13*1 3/4" | 44.5 | 2.38 | 15 |
bwg13*2" | 50.8 | 2.38 | 15 |
bwg14*1 3/4" | 40 | 2.1 | 14 |
5.FAQ
We have organized several common questions for our clients,may help you sincerely:
1. What’s your products ?
One of the most biggest manufacturer & supplier of Common Nail ,is a large-scale professional Common Nail factory in China. Annually more than 10000 tons Common Nail are exported to markets all over the world. Different kinds of Common Nail are available according to customer’s requirements.
2.What is advantage of our products?
All items are of Top Quality with best price. Direct wholesale price from Factory and 100%quality guaranteed .Large Selection with all sizes .
3. How long can we receive the product after purchase?
In the purchase of First Class Common Nail within three working days, We will arrange the factory delivery as soon as possible. The pacific time of receiving is related to the state and position of customers. Commonly 15 to 20 working days can be served.
3.05mm Roofing Nails Wire Diameter Roofing Nails 32mm Bulk or CartonDifferent Sizes the Concrete Nails From China Customised Brand
- Q: whenever i try to connect two electrical wires by twisting them together, i hold the two wires paralell to eachother, grab them with needle nose pliers and turn it. it never seems to work though! if anything, it just breaks the wire and i have to strip more insulation! what am i doing wrong? thx
- You are doing it right but do not use needle nose pliers. Use ordinary pliers or linesman pliers are the best. Grab the two wires straight on - not sideways - with the pliers down at the insulation and move the pliers to the end of the wire as you twist it. If it is too long or uneven snip it off.
- Q: Our house ground wire is very long but our live and natural wires are very short. Once there was a surge in our telephone line system and both my Belkin Surge Protectors seemed to have not stopped it. The surge was stopped at my last protector when its sensitive fuse blew (it was a 10 ohm resistor fuse). Is it possible that since the natural wire is shorter than the ground wire the surge wantted to go through my PC and into the natural wire? Or is it just because the 10 ohm resistor fuse was a bit too sensitive or something? (Well it didn't blow up when there was no lightning outside)I'm thinking of making my natural wire longer by extending it so a surge finds the ground wire more attractive, is this advice able?
- Your ground wire should go to your breaker box, then to a ground rod or some other good ground point with a large #6 solid wire. I don't understand why your ground wire should be substantially longer than your neutral or hot wires. Making your neutral wire longer would probably have little effect. You could also have a poor connection in your ground wiring. Maybe some corrosion has accumulated somewhere. A surge protector can't operate correctly without a good ground. It sounds like you should have an electrician check your electrical system. This could save you money in the long run.
- Q: I'm wiring a dvc 4ohm sub with 1000rms and I'm trying to wire it at 2 ohms to a mono-d amplifier. Is there a recomendation on the guage of speaker wire I should use? And Another question. When I run a wire to both positive terminals and a seperate wire to both negative terminals does that give me 8ohms or how does that work?
- Guage wire This one is the best wire. Pyramid RPB10100 10 Gauge Black Ground Wire 100 Feet OFC Technical Details * 10 Gauge Black Ground Wire 100 ft. OFC * 15/0.25 x 7C,D. 5.0mm
- Q: do i need a different wire for in-wall speakers or a regular speaker wire
- If you are installing in-wall wire, look for wire with CL3 or in-wall insulation. The wire is not the issue, but the CL3 means the plastic insulation around the wire is fire-resistant and wont act like a fuse to spread a fire. Many fire codes require this. Some of the Carol brand from Home Depot is CL3 rated or buy a spool of 12 ga from PartsExpress.
- Q: okay my apt building was built in 1975 I am changing my light fixture new from home depot and the ground wire, the black and white wire are basic on the new fixture. I am looking in the case box in my ceiling all I see is a black wire attached to red, and a yellow wire attached to a white wire which then attaches to another two white wires (then gos go's up behind the casing) I am not sure which is the ground here. There is a copper looking wire that is thick, thick it just isnt as malleable as the new ground wire that is on my new light fixture. It seems very difficult to maneuver.. Could this be my ground from the ceiling. It was attached to the mount of the old fixture my a screw.
- The wire that was attached to the mount is your ground. (It should be thicker than the one from the fixture. - Use a 'wirenut' to make the connection.) The White wires will be your 'Neutrals'- 'White' from your new fixture. For the 'Black' from the fixture, use the same wire that was connected to the old fixtures 'black'. If you didn't keep track of which is which, then you are now 'in over your head'. Get experienced help before you cause damage or hurt yourself.
- Q: so there are 3 different wires coming into the switch. 1 black wire and 2 white wires going to the attic fan (i assume one for high and one for low). the power seems to be coming from the black wire which has inside of it, one white wire (neutral) one black wire (hot) and one bare wire (ground).. the same for the 2 white wires. the switch goes up (^) for high and down (v) for low and has 3 places to attach the wires to. the top, the bottom and the middle.. can someone tell me how to wire this damn thing?
- Wire nut all the white neutral wires together. Wire all the bare ground conductors together. The the hot wire will attach to the terminal labeled common and one each of the other 2 black wires will attach to the high and low terminals. If it runs high while low is selected etc, the swap the last 2 and try again. PS any time there are multiple conductors in an overall covering it is called a cable. You have for example 1 black cable and 2 white cables.
- Q: I have a 200 amp main breaker just below my meter, which is mounted on a pole. The neutral wire coming in is run to ground. From this box, I've run 2 cables (1/0) ~80 ft to another box with a 150 amp main breaker. This box is grounded to an 8ft ground rod. I am wondering whether this setup (no neutral wire from meter pole to building) would potentially allow a ground fault without tripping the 200 amp main. For example, if somebody dug into the line with a backhoe? Oh yeah, the cable is in a 3ft deep trench that will be covered. I have an abridged version of the NEC, but I haven't found this particular topic covered. Thanks.
- what you did should be alright
- Q: how to wire a receptacle with 6 wires?
- I say that JimW has given you the best answer ..... sounds to me that the box that those wires are in is a connector or in-line jumper box ---- where is your multi-meter or 2-wire/glow tester to find whatz hot .... the certified electrician is going to do what JimW says ... further tests will prove it .......
- Q: wire colors and funtions
- Car Radio Battery Constant 12v+ Wire: Green/Yellow Car Radio Accessory Switched 12v+ Wire: Yellow/Black Car Radio Ground Wire: Red or Black Car Radio Illumination Wire: Blue/Red Car Stereo Dimmer Wire: N/A Car Stereo Antenna Trigger: N/A Car Stereo Amp Trigger Wire: N/A Car Stereo Amplifier Location: N/A Car Audio Front Speakers Size: N/A Car Audio Front Speakers Location: N/A Left Front Speaker Positive Wire (+): Orange/Green Left Front Speaker Negative Wire (-): Black/White Right Front Speaker Positive Wire (+): White/Green Right Front Speaker Negative Wire (-): Black/White Car Audio Rear Speakers Size: N/A Car Audio Rear Speakers Location: N/A Left Rear Speaker Positive Wire (+): Pink/Green Left Rear Speaker Negative Wire (-): Pink/Blue Right Rear Speaker Positive Wire (+): Pink/Blue Right Rear Speaker Negative Wire (-): Green/Orange
- Q: I'm trying to install a ceiling fan and I'm looking for some help given my home's wiring. I have a single light switch in the room, and here's what's coming out of the ceiling: 2 white wires, 2 black wires and a ground wire. It seems like a set of white and black originate from the same location (in both cases). My celing fan with light has a remote connection, so there's one black, one white and one ground wire coming from my fan to connect to the ceiling. Can someone let me know how to hook it up so the fan and light both work? Thanks in advance.
- if you have separated the wires from one another you have created a small problem which will require that you determine which pair are bringing the power in (line) You can buy a cheap 2-wire tester which us always a useful tool to have around. with the power on, carefully touch the the tester to one pair at a time (a black and white wire- don't let any of the wires touch each other, and the tester should light up. the other pair are running to the switch. note which pair is which. Have the switch extended out of the wall so that you can examine the wiring. Using wire nuts, ( the plastic screw-on caps) attach the hot black to the white wire of the non-hot pair and shove deep into the box out of your way...you are done with it.. that will deliver the power to the switch and now the black from the non-hot pair will bring it back to the fan becoming your new hot wire controlled now by the switch.. the switch should have the white wire and the black wire from the same pair attached to it..) the white wire from your remote receiver will attach to the white wire from ceiling box and the black and blue (light)wires from the receiver will connect with wire nuts to the newly established hot black. SWITCH AT WALL SHOULD NOW BE OFF. you can now continue the fan installation. Be mindful of the fact that the remote receiver slides into the space in the fan mounting bracket and there is very little room to get the receiver and all the connected wires in and under the canopy/cover. being as neat as posible with your wiring and wire placement is essential. good luck.
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Different Sizes the Concrete Nails From China Customised Brand
- Loading Port:
- Shanghai
- Payment Terms:
- TT OR LC
- Min Order Qty:
- 25 m.t.
- Supply Capability:
- 25000000 m.t./month
OKorder Service Pledge
OKorder Financial Service
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