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K M. Kerr
K M. Kerr

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After 34 Years of Roofing, Here's the Cordless Nailer Secret I'm Spilling

Most homeowners think a roofing nailer is just a nailer. They don't see the 20–30 minutes we lose every morning dragging hoses up the ladder, untangling lines, and waiting for the compressor to build pressure. On a Bahamian re-roof in July, that lost time isn't just an annoyance—it's a profit killer. Over 34 years, I've watched those minutes steal thousands of dollars from my bottom line, all while the client never understands why the crew looks exhausted before the first nail is fired. But the industry has been hiding a better way. I've been testing cordless coil nailers for three years now, and I'm ready to share what contractors know that you don't. Here's what I know now—starting with the hose problem nobody talks about.

On a typical re-roof job, you lose 20-30 minutes just setting up the compressor, running hose, and making sure your connections aren't leaking. Then you've got a 50-foot hose snaking across the roof deck while you're trying to move fast between shingles. Every time you reposition, you're dragging that hose. Every time the compressor cycles, you're waiting for pressure to build back up.

On a hot day — and in the Bahamas, every day is a hot day — that compressor is also sucking dust into its intake and running harder than it should. I've burned out two compressors in the last five years from sand and salt air alone.

The Milwaukee M18 FUEL Coil Roofing Nailer (2909-20)

This is the one that's been getting the most buzz, and for good reason. The Milwaukee M18 FUEL 18V Cordless Coil Roofing Nailer runs on the M18 battery platform, which means if you're already in the Milwaukee ecosystem, you're not buying into a new battery line.

What matters to me on a roof:

Weight. At just over 8 lbs bare, it's lighter than my old pneumatic setup (nailer + hose + dragging the compressor hose around). When you're on a roof for 6 hours, every pound counts.

Consistency. Pneumatic nailers are only as good as your air pressure. When the compressor's lagging, you get shallow drives. The Milwaukee drives consistently because it's not waiting on air. The POWERSTATE brushless motor and nitrogen gas spring mechanism deliver the same strike every time — first nail to last nail.

Speed. No compressor lag. No repositioning hose. You walk to where you need to nail and you start nailing. On a small job — a shed roof, a porch overhang, a repair patch — you're done before you'd even have the pneumatic setup assembled.

Coil capacity. Holds 120 nails per coil. That's standard for roofing nailers, but worth noting — you're not reloading every two minutes.

Where It Falls Short

I'm not going to pretend it's perfect. At around $449 bare tool (Milwaukee M18 FUEL Coil Roofing Nailer on Amazon), it's a serious investment. And "bare tool" means you need an M18 battery and charger if you don't already have them. Add another $80-150 depending on the battery you choose.

Battery life is the other question. On a full re-roof, you'll burn through 2-3 batteries in a day. If you're running a crew of three nailers, that's 6-9 batteries charging and rotating. You need a charging station on site, and you need to stay on top of it. The fuel gauge on the battery helps, but it's still one more thing to manage.

For big production roofing — 30+ squares — a pneumatic setup with a good compressor still makes more sense economically. You're not buying $150 batteries and you're not waiting on charges.

Where It Makes Sense

Here's where I'd tell a guy to spend the money:

  • Service calls and repair jobs. If you're patching a section of roof, fixing storm damage, or doing a small re-roof (under 10 squares), the time you save on setup and teardown pays for itself fast.
  • Remote jobs. No power on site? No problem. No compressor to haul up a ladder or onto a roof deck.
  • Steep pitch work. Less hose to manage on a steep roof means less chance of a fall. That's not a convenience thing — that's a safety thing.
  • Crews already on M18. If your guys are running Milwaukee drills, saws, and impacts already, the battery interchangeability makes this a no-brainer.

My Bottom Line

After three decades in this business, I've learned that the right tool isn't always the cheapest one — it's the one that gets the job done safely and without wasted motion. The Milwaukee M18 FUEL Coil Roofing Nailer isn't going to replace a pneumatic setup on every job. But for the jobs where setup time kills your margin — repairs, small roofs, remote sites, steep pitches — it's the tool that pays for itself in saved time and fewer headaches.

If you're already running M18 batteries and you do any amount of roofing work, this one belongs on your truck. If you're a homeowner doing a one-time DIY re-roof, rent a pneumatic setup and save yourself $450. Know what job you're buying for.


I've been painting and renovating in the Bahamas since 1992. These are my honest opinions based on decades of job-site experience, not sponsored content. Some links above are affiliate links — they cost you nothing extra and help keep the lights on.

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