Nails holding drywallDrywall - final joint compound coatCan I install drywall on the ceiling, without removing crown molding?I'm looking for a drywall finish that will hold a magnetWhat is the best way to replace a large section of 3/4" plastered drywall?Plaster Wall Ice Damming Water DamageExterior Fire-rated Wall Assembly?Bought a 20 year old house last spring and it appears to be settling - when to call in expertsWhat compound should be used for base skim coat?Cracked rafter fix and loose truss platesHow to patch a wood lath plaster rounded corner?

Kanji etymology of 毎?

Is it normal for gliders not to have attitude indicators?

Are the Night's Watch still required?

Is there a word that describes the unjustified use of a more complex word?

Can you use "едать" and "игрывать" in the present and future tenses?

How can I get people to remember my character's gender?

Indentation Tex

Is there precedent or are there procedures for a US president refusing to concede to an electoral defeat?

History of the kernel of a homomorphism?

Adding command shortcuts to /bin

Nested loops to process groups of pictures

What is a common way to tell if an academic is "above average," or outstanding in their field? Is their h-index (Hirsh index) one of them?

Find magical solution to magical equation

How to pass hash as password to ssh server

Is the book wrong about the Nyquist Sampling Criterion?

When does tabularx decide to break the cell entry instead of reducing the columns separation?

Mug and wireframe entirely disappeared

Python 3 - simple temperature program

Should I mention being denied entry to UK due to a confusion in my Visa and Ticket bookings?

Why didn't this character get a funeral at the end of Avengers: Endgame?

Should homeowners insurance cover the cost of the home?

It is as simple as ABC

What are the advantages of luxury car brands like Acura/Lexus over their sibling non-luxury brands Honda/Toyota?

Hostile Divisor Numbers



Nails holding drywall


Drywall - final joint compound coatCan I install drywall on the ceiling, without removing crown molding?I'm looking for a drywall finish that will hold a magnetWhat is the best way to replace a large section of 3/4" plastered drywall?Plaster Wall Ice Damming Water DamageExterior Fire-rated Wall Assembly?Bought a 20 year old house last spring and it appears to be settling - when to call in expertsWhat compound should be used for base skim coat?Cracked rafter fix and loose truss platesHow to patch a wood lath plaster rounded corner?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








5















The upstairs of my house was remodeled before I bought it. The whole house used to be plaster and lath but the upstairs is now drywall. The upstairs drywall has needed some minor repairs ever since I've moved in.



What I've noticed is that the majority of the blemishes that need to be repaired are nails. It is as though the nails are popping the joint compound off the walls and ceiling. Further, it looks like the drywall is actually held in with nails.



Is it common to attach drywall with nails?



Should I pull the nails and replace them with screws before fixing the blemishes?










share|improve this question

















  • 3





    This is super common because hammers are cheaper than screw guns for a crew of installers. The blemishes even have a common term - "nail pops".

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 18:19






  • 3





    @JPhi1618 - If I ever saw a drywall crew use nails I would not only make them use screws but never think about hiring them again. We know that no matter what nails will pop after a 10-15 years, this isn't a matter of opinion. If drywall crew is cutting corners here who knows what else they do.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:35











  • @DMoore, absolutely. Screws are the norm now - I should have stated it was very common in the past. I have a 90's house full of drywall nails and I hate it.

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 19:37






  • 2





    This reminds of a builder we were about to hire. I always ask for a complete materials list. I saw a bunch of flat head nails... thought maybe roof. Confirmed drywall - lost the job.b

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:46






  • 1





    @Jasen - Not true. Most drywall is not installed with glue. Glue may be used in some specific applications but not in general.

    – Michael Karas
    Apr 26 at 4:43

















5















The upstairs of my house was remodeled before I bought it. The whole house used to be plaster and lath but the upstairs is now drywall. The upstairs drywall has needed some minor repairs ever since I've moved in.



What I've noticed is that the majority of the blemishes that need to be repaired are nails. It is as though the nails are popping the joint compound off the walls and ceiling. Further, it looks like the drywall is actually held in with nails.



Is it common to attach drywall with nails?



Should I pull the nails and replace them with screws before fixing the blemishes?










share|improve this question

















  • 3





    This is super common because hammers are cheaper than screw guns for a crew of installers. The blemishes even have a common term - "nail pops".

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 18:19






  • 3





    @JPhi1618 - If I ever saw a drywall crew use nails I would not only make them use screws but never think about hiring them again. We know that no matter what nails will pop after a 10-15 years, this isn't a matter of opinion. If drywall crew is cutting corners here who knows what else they do.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:35











  • @DMoore, absolutely. Screws are the norm now - I should have stated it was very common in the past. I have a 90's house full of drywall nails and I hate it.

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 19:37






  • 2





    This reminds of a builder we were about to hire. I always ask for a complete materials list. I saw a bunch of flat head nails... thought maybe roof. Confirmed drywall - lost the job.b

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:46






  • 1





    @Jasen - Not true. Most drywall is not installed with glue. Glue may be used in some specific applications but not in general.

    – Michael Karas
    Apr 26 at 4:43













5












5








5








The upstairs of my house was remodeled before I bought it. The whole house used to be plaster and lath but the upstairs is now drywall. The upstairs drywall has needed some minor repairs ever since I've moved in.



What I've noticed is that the majority of the blemishes that need to be repaired are nails. It is as though the nails are popping the joint compound off the walls and ceiling. Further, it looks like the drywall is actually held in with nails.



Is it common to attach drywall with nails?



Should I pull the nails and replace them with screws before fixing the blemishes?










share|improve this question














The upstairs of my house was remodeled before I bought it. The whole house used to be plaster and lath but the upstairs is now drywall. The upstairs drywall has needed some minor repairs ever since I've moved in.



What I've noticed is that the majority of the blemishes that need to be repaired are nails. It is as though the nails are popping the joint compound off the walls and ceiling. Further, it looks like the drywall is actually held in with nails.



Is it common to attach drywall with nails?



Should I pull the nails and replace them with screws before fixing the blemishes?







drywall






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Apr 25 at 18:16









vini_ivini_i

264312




264312







  • 3





    This is super common because hammers are cheaper than screw guns for a crew of installers. The blemishes even have a common term - "nail pops".

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 18:19






  • 3





    @JPhi1618 - If I ever saw a drywall crew use nails I would not only make them use screws but never think about hiring them again. We know that no matter what nails will pop after a 10-15 years, this isn't a matter of opinion. If drywall crew is cutting corners here who knows what else they do.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:35











  • @DMoore, absolutely. Screws are the norm now - I should have stated it was very common in the past. I have a 90's house full of drywall nails and I hate it.

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 19:37






  • 2





    This reminds of a builder we were about to hire. I always ask for a complete materials list. I saw a bunch of flat head nails... thought maybe roof. Confirmed drywall - lost the job.b

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:46






  • 1





    @Jasen - Not true. Most drywall is not installed with glue. Glue may be used in some specific applications but not in general.

    – Michael Karas
    Apr 26 at 4:43












  • 3





    This is super common because hammers are cheaper than screw guns for a crew of installers. The blemishes even have a common term - "nail pops".

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 18:19






  • 3





    @JPhi1618 - If I ever saw a drywall crew use nails I would not only make them use screws but never think about hiring them again. We know that no matter what nails will pop after a 10-15 years, this isn't a matter of opinion. If drywall crew is cutting corners here who knows what else they do.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:35











  • @DMoore, absolutely. Screws are the norm now - I should have stated it was very common in the past. I have a 90's house full of drywall nails and I hate it.

    – JPhi1618
    Apr 25 at 19:37






  • 2





    This reminds of a builder we were about to hire. I always ask for a complete materials list. I saw a bunch of flat head nails... thought maybe roof. Confirmed drywall - lost the job.b

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 19:46






  • 1





    @Jasen - Not true. Most drywall is not installed with glue. Glue may be used in some specific applications but not in general.

    – Michael Karas
    Apr 26 at 4:43







3




3





This is super common because hammers are cheaper than screw guns for a crew of installers. The blemishes even have a common term - "nail pops".

– JPhi1618
Apr 25 at 18:19





This is super common because hammers are cheaper than screw guns for a crew of installers. The blemishes even have a common term - "nail pops".

– JPhi1618
Apr 25 at 18:19




3




3





@JPhi1618 - If I ever saw a drywall crew use nails I would not only make them use screws but never think about hiring them again. We know that no matter what nails will pop after a 10-15 years, this isn't a matter of opinion. If drywall crew is cutting corners here who knows what else they do.

– DMoore
Apr 25 at 19:35





@JPhi1618 - If I ever saw a drywall crew use nails I would not only make them use screws but never think about hiring them again. We know that no matter what nails will pop after a 10-15 years, this isn't a matter of opinion. If drywall crew is cutting corners here who knows what else they do.

– DMoore
Apr 25 at 19:35













@DMoore, absolutely. Screws are the norm now - I should have stated it was very common in the past. I have a 90's house full of drywall nails and I hate it.

– JPhi1618
Apr 25 at 19:37





@DMoore, absolutely. Screws are the norm now - I should have stated it was very common in the past. I have a 90's house full of drywall nails and I hate it.

– JPhi1618
Apr 25 at 19:37




2




2





This reminds of a builder we were about to hire. I always ask for a complete materials list. I saw a bunch of flat head nails... thought maybe roof. Confirmed drywall - lost the job.b

– DMoore
Apr 25 at 19:46





This reminds of a builder we were about to hire. I always ask for a complete materials list. I saw a bunch of flat head nails... thought maybe roof. Confirmed drywall - lost the job.b

– DMoore
Apr 25 at 19:46




1




1





@Jasen - Not true. Most drywall is not installed with glue. Glue may be used in some specific applications but not in general.

– Michael Karas
Apr 26 at 4:43





@Jasen - Not true. Most drywall is not installed with glue. Glue may be used in some specific applications but not in general.

– Michael Karas
Apr 26 at 4:43










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















7














It is not common now, it once was.



At one time it was standard practice to use nails. It could be the the structure in the wall that the nail are into is not all that solid so the heads (Pop). I always notice a few popped heads after an earthquake here.



I do not think you need to pull them, Put a screw in next to each one and then gently hammer the nail back into place. The screw should keep the drywall from moving an thus the nail from popping out again. Then you can make your finishing repairs. Of coarse you could pull them if you want.






share|improve this answer























  • The renovation took place in 2008. Is that far enough back to have used nails?

    – vini_i
    Apr 25 at 18:28






  • 1





    Our house was built in 2002 and used nails.

    – BillDOe
    Apr 25 at 18:35











  • I've done renovations in 2017 and used ring shank or pitch coated nails because I am a lazy bastard and nails are faster and easier to judge depth on and I'm weak and can't keep a lot of weight on the back of the drill to drive the screws in properly, sometimes. They're also easier to remove when the next renovation comes around. Screws are fine too, of course.

    – Adonalsium
    Apr 25 at 18:58












  • @vini_i My house was flipped three years ago and they used nails... which are popping out and very noticeable now. A few have broken through the paint...

    – Zach Mierzejewski
    Apr 25 at 22:14











  • @vini_i if the reno work was done by a handy-person then they could be using older techniques. So yes even work done today could involve nailing drywall.

    – Criggie
    Apr 26 at 2:02


















9














It was common. Now most drywall is screwed, which leads to much fewer pops.



The usual fix is to screw between the popped nails (and a few more may pop as the board is pulled tight). Then pull and patch the popped nails.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    Remember, screw guns have only been widely used since the 80s and even then it was hit and miss.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 18:40






  • 1





    @DMoore - ;-)))

    – Hot Licks
    Apr 25 at 22:43











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "73"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f163747%2fnails-holding-drywall%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














It is not common now, it once was.



At one time it was standard practice to use nails. It could be the the structure in the wall that the nail are into is not all that solid so the heads (Pop). I always notice a few popped heads after an earthquake here.



I do not think you need to pull them, Put a screw in next to each one and then gently hammer the nail back into place. The screw should keep the drywall from moving an thus the nail from popping out again. Then you can make your finishing repairs. Of coarse you could pull them if you want.






share|improve this answer























  • The renovation took place in 2008. Is that far enough back to have used nails?

    – vini_i
    Apr 25 at 18:28






  • 1





    Our house was built in 2002 and used nails.

    – BillDOe
    Apr 25 at 18:35











  • I've done renovations in 2017 and used ring shank or pitch coated nails because I am a lazy bastard and nails are faster and easier to judge depth on and I'm weak and can't keep a lot of weight on the back of the drill to drive the screws in properly, sometimes. They're also easier to remove when the next renovation comes around. Screws are fine too, of course.

    – Adonalsium
    Apr 25 at 18:58












  • @vini_i My house was flipped three years ago and they used nails... which are popping out and very noticeable now. A few have broken through the paint...

    – Zach Mierzejewski
    Apr 25 at 22:14











  • @vini_i if the reno work was done by a handy-person then they could be using older techniques. So yes even work done today could involve nailing drywall.

    – Criggie
    Apr 26 at 2:02















7














It is not common now, it once was.



At one time it was standard practice to use nails. It could be the the structure in the wall that the nail are into is not all that solid so the heads (Pop). I always notice a few popped heads after an earthquake here.



I do not think you need to pull them, Put a screw in next to each one and then gently hammer the nail back into place. The screw should keep the drywall from moving an thus the nail from popping out again. Then you can make your finishing repairs. Of coarse you could pull them if you want.






share|improve this answer























  • The renovation took place in 2008. Is that far enough back to have used nails?

    – vini_i
    Apr 25 at 18:28






  • 1





    Our house was built in 2002 and used nails.

    – BillDOe
    Apr 25 at 18:35











  • I've done renovations in 2017 and used ring shank or pitch coated nails because I am a lazy bastard and nails are faster and easier to judge depth on and I'm weak and can't keep a lot of weight on the back of the drill to drive the screws in properly, sometimes. They're also easier to remove when the next renovation comes around. Screws are fine too, of course.

    – Adonalsium
    Apr 25 at 18:58












  • @vini_i My house was flipped three years ago and they used nails... which are popping out and very noticeable now. A few have broken through the paint...

    – Zach Mierzejewski
    Apr 25 at 22:14











  • @vini_i if the reno work was done by a handy-person then they could be using older techniques. So yes even work done today could involve nailing drywall.

    – Criggie
    Apr 26 at 2:02













7












7








7







It is not common now, it once was.



At one time it was standard practice to use nails. It could be the the structure in the wall that the nail are into is not all that solid so the heads (Pop). I always notice a few popped heads after an earthquake here.



I do not think you need to pull them, Put a screw in next to each one and then gently hammer the nail back into place. The screw should keep the drywall from moving an thus the nail from popping out again. Then you can make your finishing repairs. Of coarse you could pull them if you want.






share|improve this answer













It is not common now, it once was.



At one time it was standard practice to use nails. It could be the the structure in the wall that the nail are into is not all that solid so the heads (Pop). I always notice a few popped heads after an earthquake here.



I do not think you need to pull them, Put a screw in next to each one and then gently hammer the nail back into place. The screw should keep the drywall from moving an thus the nail from popping out again. Then you can make your finishing repairs. Of coarse you could pull them if you want.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 25 at 18:25









Alaska manAlaska man

3,645311




3,645311












  • The renovation took place in 2008. Is that far enough back to have used nails?

    – vini_i
    Apr 25 at 18:28






  • 1





    Our house was built in 2002 and used nails.

    – BillDOe
    Apr 25 at 18:35











  • I've done renovations in 2017 and used ring shank or pitch coated nails because I am a lazy bastard and nails are faster and easier to judge depth on and I'm weak and can't keep a lot of weight on the back of the drill to drive the screws in properly, sometimes. They're also easier to remove when the next renovation comes around. Screws are fine too, of course.

    – Adonalsium
    Apr 25 at 18:58












  • @vini_i My house was flipped three years ago and they used nails... which are popping out and very noticeable now. A few have broken through the paint...

    – Zach Mierzejewski
    Apr 25 at 22:14











  • @vini_i if the reno work was done by a handy-person then they could be using older techniques. So yes even work done today could involve nailing drywall.

    – Criggie
    Apr 26 at 2:02

















  • The renovation took place in 2008. Is that far enough back to have used nails?

    – vini_i
    Apr 25 at 18:28






  • 1





    Our house was built in 2002 and used nails.

    – BillDOe
    Apr 25 at 18:35











  • I've done renovations in 2017 and used ring shank or pitch coated nails because I am a lazy bastard and nails are faster and easier to judge depth on and I'm weak and can't keep a lot of weight on the back of the drill to drive the screws in properly, sometimes. They're also easier to remove when the next renovation comes around. Screws are fine too, of course.

    – Adonalsium
    Apr 25 at 18:58












  • @vini_i My house was flipped three years ago and they used nails... which are popping out and very noticeable now. A few have broken through the paint...

    – Zach Mierzejewski
    Apr 25 at 22:14











  • @vini_i if the reno work was done by a handy-person then they could be using older techniques. So yes even work done today could involve nailing drywall.

    – Criggie
    Apr 26 at 2:02
















The renovation took place in 2008. Is that far enough back to have used nails?

– vini_i
Apr 25 at 18:28





The renovation took place in 2008. Is that far enough back to have used nails?

– vini_i
Apr 25 at 18:28




1




1





Our house was built in 2002 and used nails.

– BillDOe
Apr 25 at 18:35





Our house was built in 2002 and used nails.

– BillDOe
Apr 25 at 18:35













I've done renovations in 2017 and used ring shank or pitch coated nails because I am a lazy bastard and nails are faster and easier to judge depth on and I'm weak and can't keep a lot of weight on the back of the drill to drive the screws in properly, sometimes. They're also easier to remove when the next renovation comes around. Screws are fine too, of course.

– Adonalsium
Apr 25 at 18:58






I've done renovations in 2017 and used ring shank or pitch coated nails because I am a lazy bastard and nails are faster and easier to judge depth on and I'm weak and can't keep a lot of weight on the back of the drill to drive the screws in properly, sometimes. They're also easier to remove when the next renovation comes around. Screws are fine too, of course.

– Adonalsium
Apr 25 at 18:58














@vini_i My house was flipped three years ago and they used nails... which are popping out and very noticeable now. A few have broken through the paint...

– Zach Mierzejewski
Apr 25 at 22:14





@vini_i My house was flipped three years ago and they used nails... which are popping out and very noticeable now. A few have broken through the paint...

– Zach Mierzejewski
Apr 25 at 22:14













@vini_i if the reno work was done by a handy-person then they could be using older techniques. So yes even work done today could involve nailing drywall.

– Criggie
Apr 26 at 2:02





@vini_i if the reno work was done by a handy-person then they could be using older techniques. So yes even work done today could involve nailing drywall.

– Criggie
Apr 26 at 2:02













9














It was common. Now most drywall is screwed, which leads to much fewer pops.



The usual fix is to screw between the popped nails (and a few more may pop as the board is pulled tight). Then pull and patch the popped nails.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    Remember, screw guns have only been widely used since the 80s and even then it was hit and miss.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 18:40






  • 1





    @DMoore - ;-)))

    – Hot Licks
    Apr 25 at 22:43















9














It was common. Now most drywall is screwed, which leads to much fewer pops.



The usual fix is to screw between the popped nails (and a few more may pop as the board is pulled tight). Then pull and patch the popped nails.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    Remember, screw guns have only been widely used since the 80s and even then it was hit and miss.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 18:40






  • 1





    @DMoore - ;-)))

    – Hot Licks
    Apr 25 at 22:43













9












9








9







It was common. Now most drywall is screwed, which leads to much fewer pops.



The usual fix is to screw between the popped nails (and a few more may pop as the board is pulled tight). Then pull and patch the popped nails.






share|improve this answer













It was common. Now most drywall is screwed, which leads to much fewer pops.



The usual fix is to screw between the popped nails (and a few more may pop as the board is pulled tight). Then pull and patch the popped nails.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 25 at 18:19









bibbib

31.4k95392




31.4k95392







  • 3





    Remember, screw guns have only been widely used since the 80s and even then it was hit and miss.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 18:40






  • 1





    @DMoore - ;-)))

    – Hot Licks
    Apr 25 at 22:43












  • 3





    Remember, screw guns have only been widely used since the 80s and even then it was hit and miss.

    – DMoore
    Apr 25 at 18:40






  • 1





    @DMoore - ;-)))

    – Hot Licks
    Apr 25 at 22:43







3




3





Remember, screw guns have only been widely used since the 80s and even then it was hit and miss.

– DMoore
Apr 25 at 18:40





Remember, screw guns have only been widely used since the 80s and even then it was hit and miss.

– DMoore
Apr 25 at 18:40




1




1





@DMoore - ;-)))

– Hot Licks
Apr 25 at 22:43





@DMoore - ;-)))

– Hot Licks
Apr 25 at 22:43

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Home Improvement Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f163747%2fnails-holding-drywall%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Club Baloncesto Breogán Índice Historia | Pavillón | Nome | O Breogán na cultura popular | Xogadores | Adestradores | Presidentes | Palmarés | Historial | Líderes | Notas | Véxase tamén | Menú de navegacióncbbreogan.galCadroGuía oficial da ACB 2009-10, páxina 201Guía oficial ACB 1992, páxina 183. Editorial DB.É de 6.500 espectadores sentados axeitándose á última normativa"Estudiantes Junior, entre as mellores canteiras"o orixinalHemeroteca El Mundo Deportivo, 16 setembro de 1970, páxina 12Historia do BreogánAlfredo Pérez, o último canoneiroHistoria C.B. BreogánHemeroteca de El Mundo DeportivoJimmy Wright, norteamericano do Breogán deixará Lugo por ameazas de morteResultados de Breogán en 1986-87Resultados de Breogán en 1990-91Ficha de Velimir Perasović en acb.comResultados de Breogán en 1994-95Breogán arrasa al Barça. "El Mundo Deportivo", 27 de setembro de 1999, páxina 58CB Breogán - FC BarcelonaA FEB invita a participar nunha nova Liga EuropeaCharlie Bell na prensa estatalMáximos anotadores 2005Tempada 2005-06 : Tódolos Xogadores da Xornada""Non quero pensar nunha man negra, mais pregúntome que está a pasar""o orixinalRaúl López, orgulloso dos xogadores, presume da boa saúde económica do BreogánJulio González confirma que cesa como presidente del BreogánHomenaxe a Lisardo GómezA tempada do rexurdimento celesteEntrevista a Lisardo GómezEl COB dinamita el Pazo para forzar el quinto (69-73)Cafés Candelas, patrocinador del CB Breogán"Suso Lázare, novo presidente do Breogán"o orixinalCafés Candelas Breogán firma el mayor triunfo de la historiaEl Breogán realizará 17 homenajes por su cincuenta aniversario"O Breogán honra ao seu fundador e primeiro presidente"o orixinalMiguel Giao recibiu a homenaxe do PazoHomenaxe aos primeiros gladiadores celestesO home que nos amosa como ver o Breo co corazónTita Franco será homenaxeada polos #50anosdeBreoJulio Vila recibirá unha homenaxe in memoriam polos #50anosdeBreo"O Breogán homenaxeará aos seus aboados máis veteráns"Pechada ovación a «Capi» Sanmartín e Ricardo «Corazón de González»Homenaxe por décadas de informaciónPaco García volve ao Pazo con motivo do 50 aniversario"Resultados y clasificaciones""O Cafés Candelas Breogán, campión da Copa Princesa""O Cafés Candelas Breogán, equipo ACB"C.B. Breogán"Proxecto social"o orixinal"Centros asociados"o orixinalFicha en imdb.comMario Camus trata la recuperación del amor en 'La vieja música', su última película"Páxina web oficial""Club Baloncesto Breogán""C. B. Breogán S.A.D."eehttp://www.fegaba.com

Vilaño, A Laracha Índice Patrimonio | Lugares e parroquias | Véxase tamén | Menú de navegación43°14′52″N 8°36′03″O / 43.24775, -8.60070

Cegueira Índice Epidemioloxía | Deficiencia visual | Tipos de cegueira | Principais causas de cegueira | Tratamento | Técnicas de adaptación e axudas | Vida dos cegos | Primeiros auxilios | Crenzas respecto das persoas cegas | Crenzas das persoas cegas | O neno deficiente visual | Aspectos psicolóxicos da cegueira | Notas | Véxase tamén | Menú de navegación54.054.154.436928256blindnessDicionario da Real Academia GalegaPortal das Palabras"International Standards: Visual Standards — Aspects and Ranges of Vision Loss with Emphasis on Population Surveys.""Visual impairment and blindness""Presentan un plan para previr a cegueira"o orixinalACCDV Associació Catalana de Cecs i Disminuïts Visuals - PMFTrachoma"Effect of gene therapy on visual function in Leber's congenital amaurosis"1844137110.1056/NEJMoa0802268Cans guía - os mellores amigos dos cegosArquivadoEscola de cans guía para cegos en Mortágua, PortugalArquivado"Tecnología para ciegos y deficientes visuales. Recopilación de recursos gratuitos en la Red""Colorino""‘COL.diesis’, escuchar los sonidos del color""COL.diesis: Transforming Colour into Melody and Implementing the Result in a Colour Sensor Device"o orixinal"Sistema de desarrollo de sinestesia color-sonido para invidentes utilizando un protocolo de audio""Enseñanza táctil - geometría y color. Juegos didácticos para niños ciegos y videntes""Sistema Constanz"L'ocupació laboral dels cecs a l'Estat espanyol està pràcticament equiparada a la de les persones amb visió, entrevista amb Pedro ZuritaONCE (Organización Nacional de Cegos de España)Prevención da cegueiraDescrición de deficiencias visuais (Disc@pnet)Braillín, un boneco atractivo para calquera neno, con ou sen discapacidade, que permite familiarizarse co sistema de escritura e lectura brailleAxudas Técnicas36838ID00897494007150-90057129528256DOID:1432HP:0000618D001766C10.597.751.941.162C97109C0155020