Removing nailed roof trim (so you can reuse the wood)?

threesixright

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Hi,

I have ~ 40 meters (~ 20 cm high) wood trim around the roof. The roof will be removed (new floor on top). So I need to remove the wood.

My guess is 80% of the wood is not bad and I could use it for other things. Everything is nailed.

I'm hoping someone has some smart tips how to remove the wood/nails without damaging it too much ? Mission impossible?

Thanks!

 
I would use a razor knife to cut the paint seals then pry the wood out carefully. I would not try to drive the nails in the trim back out. I would clip them off on the back side.
 
I have both sizes of this "Restorer's Cat's Paw" which work pretty well for getting things like trim off with minimal damage. It works better than the typical flat bar pry bar.

Cat's Paw
60k2106s2.jpg


Lee Valley also has this trim puller, which might have a little more finesse, Trim puller

This is assuming your trim is fastened with finish nails, these pull the wood off the nail, leaving the nail in place in the substrate. Then you use the "paw" end of the cat's paw or similar tool to remove the nail.
I've had mixed results in re-using trim, on my house the original builder also used glue in a lot of places, so the trim can't be removed intact.
 
pixelated said:
I have both sizes of this "Restorer's Cat's Paw" which work pretty well for getting things like trim off with minimal damage. It works better than the typical flat bar pry bar.

Cat's Paw
60k2106s2.jpg


Lee Valley also has this trim puller, which might have a little more finesse, Trim puller

This is assuming your trim is fastened with finish nails, these pull the wood off the nail, leaving the nail in place in the substrate. Then you use the "paw" end of the cat's paw or similar tool to remove the nail.
I've had mixed results in re-using trim, on my house the original builder also used glue in a lot of places, so the trim can't be removed intact.
Thanks! Looks like a great tool the job.

Anybody, Lee Valley dealer in Europe? [emoji51][emoji3526]

Sent from my X using Tapatalk
 
Axminster in the U.K. appears to have Japanese restorers cats paw which looks like the one on the previous posters pictures

 
pixelated said:
Lee Valley also has this trim puller, which might have a little more finesse, Trim puller

I'd vote for the Lee Valley item, that looks quite useful. The 2 best features is that it's thin and it's wide.

I've pulled a lot of trim and most of the pullers out there are relatively narrow and have a thick, sharp bevel to the blade. Unfortunately that combination leaves small indents in the top edge of the trim strips. I've resorted to scoring the trim first and then sliding in a couple of wide drywall knives behind the trim and try to leverage the trim from the wall a little bit at a time.

As others have said, don't try to force the nails back through the surface of the trim, pull them through the back or cut them off.

When cutting the nails, I prefer a RA grinder with a .040" thick abrasive disc because you can trim the nail flush with the wood surface. Using nippers will always leave a little nub left hanging out the back.
 
Estwing makes that same or a very similar tool.https://www.estwing.com/collections/pry-bars

Once you remove the trim if the nails are finish nails with no head you can pull them out the back side of the trim and do no damage to the face side. Then just fill the nail hole before you paint.
 
If the trim is installed correctly, the nails will be in solid framing and a total pita to remove. If light prying doesn’t work, rather than risk denting or splintering the wood, I use a good size nail punch and drive the nails through. Then you can fill the holes with epoxy or another good wood filler and avoid catastrophic damage which often happens if you pry on top of or under the wood. If using a pry bar I like to slip a putty knife under where the pry bar makes contact with the wood, then you won’t hurt the woods surface.
 
"If using a pry bar I like to slip a putty knife under where the pry bar makes contact with the wood, then you won’t hurt the woods surface"

Yes, that's a trick I use too that works very well, forgot to mention it.
 
I previously struggled removing nails from a fence, and pallets for another project. It was awful and I broke nearly as many boards as I saved using traditional prying tools.

There has to be a better way! So internet to the rescue and I found a pneumatic nail punch. Turns out, you can drive most nails all the way through the board with significantly less damage.

Here is what I believe is the original, bet it works great but it's expensive.https://nailkicker.com

There are knockoffs available at the big box stores near me for about $75 and the same item for about $40 on Amazon.
 
I also use a pair of pliers that is specifically designed to pull nails out. They have a quarter-round ramp of a thing on one side. You just grip the nail and roll, similar to a claw hammer, but with a squeeze grip, rather than a wedge grip. The jaws don't open very far because of the ramp thing, so they are fairly useless as regualar pliers, but they excell at nail pulling.
 
WalkerBrwn said:
Hey there! I stumbled upon this post while searching for some similar information. I haven't had to remove nailed roof trim before, but I've heard that a good way to remove nails without damaging the wood is to use a cat's paw nail puller or a pry bar with a nail puller built in.

That's exactly what the link just above is.
 
woodwise said:
I previously struggled removing nails from a fence, and pallets for another project. It was awful and I broke nearly as many boards as I saved using traditional prying tools.

There has to be a better way! So internet to the rescue and I found a pneumatic nail punch. Turns out, you can drive most nails all the way through the board with significantly less damage.

Here is what I believe is the original, bet it works great but it's expensive.https://nailkicker.com

There are knockoffs available at the big box stores near me for about $75 and the same item for about $40 on Amazon.

I got one of the knock-offs and was pleasantly surprised at just how well it performs for a gun that was around $50!

Makes life a lot easier when dealing with framing and pallets.
 
Apparently I'm quite late to the party, but I'll throw this out.
https://gransforsus.com/shop/svedbro-smide-wrecking-bars/svedbro-smide-crowbars/

What used to be called the "Granfors-Bruk Tove Bar" is now called the "Svedbro-Smide Crowbar". Regardless of name, there's no pry bar like it. The ends are wide, thin and sharp-ish. The lever angle is effective. They're spring steel, so there's a snap to them when something is really tight.

Expensive, but worth every penny when demolition doesn't mean destruction.
 
As commercial glazier, I often have to remove wooden trim on storefronts and windows that need to be reusable.  I can se flush trimmers (Wera, Knipex) or a grinding wheel on my Milwaukee M12 rotary or die grinder to flush trim.
 
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