Welcome to Education by Design's Online store. We have brought to you a selection of products like Tools : B & C Eagle A314X131/22 Round Head 3 1/4 Inch by .131 Inch by 20 to 22 Degree Plastic Collated Framing Nail 500 per Box along with it's reviews, pictures and related products. All sales from these pages goes towards the creation and maintenance of our educational online activities, articles and resources. We have over 40,000 online stories submitted by kids around the world.
B & C Eagle A314X131/22 Round Head 3 1/4 Inch by .131 Inch by 20 to 22 Degree Plastic Collated Framing Nail 500 per Box
Normal Price:$16.99
Our Price:$17.99
Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
... For more information or Buy from Amazon.com ...
Manufacturer: B & C Eagle
Model: A314X131/22
Binding: Tools & Hardware
Publisher: B & C Eagle
Label: B & C Eagle
Features for B & C Eagle A314X131/22 Round Head 3 1/4 Inch by .131 Inch by 20 to 22 Degree Plastic Collated Framing Nail 500 per Box :
- Pack of 3-1/4-inch by .131-inch 20 to 22 degree framing nails
- Plain shank framing nails with full round heads
- For use with select Hitachi, Duo-Fast, Senco, Makita, Porter Cable, Max, Bostitch, and DeWalt nailers
- Packaged in box of 500
Small Picture
Medium Picture
Customer Reviews
used in porta cable fr350 
2006-03-10
worked fine no jams. best for toe nailing. length will penetrate and stick out through doubled 2x lumber so if that's an issue go for 3" nails. eye proteciton is a must as plastic collating flies in every direction and is sharp. you'll find out if you kneel on a piece by accident like i did. you do save on bulk purchase though as a 4,000 nail box of similar nails is around $45.00 at home depot(less than half the price).
Good nails. Good price. 
2002-11-07
If you have a Porter Cable FR350, for some reason finding nails can be a slight problem. The mega home store with the orange sign has them, but not consistently. So these are a good stop-gap until you can find more.
They drive well and seem to hold well.
Good General Purpose Framing Nail
2001-04-19
I have used these in an old Senco gun that I get to borrow once in a while. I have never had a jam or feed problem with them. They are a plain shank, but are glue coated. The heat generated by the friction of driving them in at a rapid rate sets the glue and makes them difficult to pull without a longer prybar. You can get them out with a claw hammer, but I always like the easy way - a cat's paw to start and a 30" prybar to finish the job. That's the long way of saying these nails have some real holding power. Try a box on your next big project.