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Load image into Gallery viewer, COX 41006 Tuck Point 1-Quart Capacity Tube Rotating Cradle Manual Caulk Gun
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, COX 41006 Tuck Point 1-Quart Capacity Tube Rotating Cradle Manual Caulk Gun
Vendor
COX

COX 41006 Tuck Point 1-Quart Capacity Tube Rotating Cradle Manual Caulk Gun

3.7
Regular price
€198,00
Sale price
€198,00
Regular price
€326,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€128,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • Mechanical advantage 12:1
  • Trowel or pour material into tube for dispensing
  • Barrel turns, application around corners
  • Switchable flow control; Thumb Activated Instant Pressure Release
  • Tuck point nozzle, grout nozzle, tube and turbine mixer included
  • Wear Compensating Device (WCD)
  • Rubber plunger between steel plates
  • Interchangeable pull handle and patented catch plate (sintered steel)

Shipping and Returns

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  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
  • Customers are advised to read our return policy for details of the return process, eligibility, refunds as well as cancellations or exchanges.
  • In case of any issues or concerns about Shipping or Returns, please contact us and we will be happy to help.

Customer Reviews

Makes repointing much easier but I ve had 2 inner tubes crack This is the second one I ve gotten. The inner tubes have a tendency to crack, but it s much easier than squeezing the cake bags for repointing. I would buy it again and again. 4Another winner from Cox Works far better than I expected.I own other Cox-brand caulking guns, and find that this unit works quite well - even with unusual materials mixes. One hint for other users would be to remove any air pockets from the hand-loaded materials tube (by tapping the tube to settle everything in it) before starting to place material.Since this is a Cox tool, I expect that it will last me at least 20 years. 5I wasted my money on this device I wanted a device that could inject mortar into cracks. This device is useless for that task. Even with a very wet mixture of Type S mortar, after two of three squirts, the mixture would not come out. Examination indicated the water was squeezed out of the mix about three inches from the tip and the dryer mix would not squeeze out the tube. I tried several times and every time the gun would no longer squeeze the material out the tube. I finally made the mix very wet but the gun did the same thing. This gun may be useful for some things but as far as I'm concerned it can't be used for mortar. Don't waste your money! 1For the novice with a large project .. get this! Fabulous product. I'm a homeowner that was doing a "stone veneer" project outside. I was in over my head from the moment I bought a bag of mortar. This was the one tool that helped me feel like I could actually "do this" with professional results. Simple to use, mix mortar the same maybe a little more moist than usual. Sometimes it clogged with a "clump" but a coat-hanger and some fiddling around would clear the point easily enough. No comparison to trying to "point" by hand in either time or finish quality! Save yourself some hassle and buy this product .. even for a large one-time project. 5Great Gun for for Keep The Mess Down. I used this for a tile floor grout job and the gun worked great.The only problem I had was the premixed grout started curing in the gun.If you are working alone I would suggest only filling about 1/4 full, and fully clean the tube and nozzle between refills.I am not sure but I think the grout I used would kick when exposed to older grout in the gun. 5but it was too runny to be useful anywhere. I think this tool takes a lot ... Not sure what to say about this thing. I could get mortar to push through, but it was too runny to be useful anywhere. I think this tool takes a lot of practice to use effectively...like months. If your job is not mixing batch after batch of mortar for months on end....then this tool is probably not going to be useful to you. Masonry is an art form that takes years of practice to master, so don't think you are going to Lowes and pick of a bag of mortar and expect it to work in this tool. It's just not going to happen. I'd save the $ and just learn how to use a tuck point trowel. That's what I did and it turns out it's really not that hard. I'll keep this around and hopefully I'll have a use for it in future projects. 2Tuck Point Really a large caulk gun. Great tool works many times better than the pastry (mortar) bag. The handle has to be squeezed and a lot of times to fill the joints all day. Keep the mortar a little on the thin side it works better. Watch out for small stone in the mix. Makes the flow slower and the squeezing harder. Was very glad to have the caulk gun made a hard job MUCH easier. Good for a tuck pointing job that will only last a few days at a time. 5learning curve I almost didn't make it thru the learning curve of this tool. I purchased it to grout the joints of the top caps of a 138 foot retaining wall with dye colored pre-mix mortar. First question: how do you fill it? I found that a piece of angle iron worked very well with little mess. The first six times I tried it, I would start to squeeze it out and the tip would act like it was plugged and stop flowing, I then would clean it all out with water and try again. Here is what I discovered: The plunger was shipped in a "loose" mode and needs to be adjusted to a snug fit inside the barrel by tightening an adjusting nut. If you do not do this, as the trigger is squeezed, the water goes around the plunger creating a mixture that is to dry to flow almost instantly. Once I got thru the "learning curve", I don't know what I would have done without it! It was awsome! and worked perfectly the rest of the project. I hope this helps. 4Tuck Pointer works... but the mix is important... I was apprensive about spending 58 bucks for this gizmo... and when I went to use it to tuck point some 70 year old failed mortar joints- I was dissapointed... as the mortar mix clogged in the large opening applicator tip. Since I had the mortar mix ready to use I dumped it out of the cylinder and applied it to my work with a putty knife and joint shaping tool. I was ready to send the product back for a refund.While at the Home Depot I noticed a bag of mortar mix busted open. I felt the dry mix and discovered that this mix had much smaller grains of sand than the original mix that clogged the tuck point gun. I bought a bag of this product, took it home and experimented with the T P Gun.It turns out that the original mortar mix, Quickrete Mortar Mix, the grains of sand used are not of consistent size and are not fine enough- which mixes to an heavy coarse mix and clogs in the T P gun.The new mortar mix, Sakrete Type-S uses fine sand, almost powdery, and mixes up with the included mixing tool to form a mortar with a consistency much like peanut butter. In one of my experiments... I added too much water to the type-s mortar and it clogged in the gun which causes water to ooze out of the plunger end of the tube. After I realized that I lost water... I dumped the wet mix back in the mixing container, remixed it up, and placed it in the TP gun, and it worked fine.It's important to clean the gun right away after use. Some silicon grease on the end of the mortar tube will allow the application tip to be removed easier.There is a learning curve to using this tool effectively, in my opinion. 4It works, but Masonry is a trade and not easy for all DIY's I had to point a crack in my web wall and tried it by hand and with a pastry bag only to make a big mess. First, understand that masonry work is a craft and trade and does not come easily to any old homeowner DIY. These guys spend a year just leaning to mix mortar and that is they key to this thing working-get the right mix. Second, as somebody else mentioned tighten down the nuts on the sealer. Two things, don't dryfit it into the tube because when it's tight and the tube is dry its REALLY hard to get it back out! Second, get it really tight or water will bypass the seal and your mortar gets dry.It takes some experimentation, don't work with more than 5-10lbs of mortar at a time, you may have to dump the tube and re-mix on occasion.My cracks were pretty bad. A mason wanted $300 to fix them. I did a respectable job with this tool, a pie cutter and $4 in mortar blend 4
COX 41006 Tuck Point 1-Quart Capacity Tube Rotating Cradle Manual Caulk Gun

COX 41006 Tuck Point 1-Quart Capacity Tube Rotating Cradle Manual Caulk Gun

3.7
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€198,00
Sale price
€198,00
Regular price
€326,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€128,00)