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Nailers/Staplers

Nailers and staplers for fastening sheet goods, trim, cladding, and upholstery. Pneumatic models run off workshop compressor lines — faster cycle rates than hand tackers, less fatigue over repetitive jobs. Pick the tool by fastener type and length range: dedicated nailers for brads and finish nails, staplers for wide-crown staples, combination guns if you switch between both. Check throat depth and magazine capacity against the run length.

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  • Air Nail Gun 10-50mm Capacity
    Not yet rated
    Sealey
    Air Nail Gun 10-50mm Capacity
    • 100-nail magazine w/ indicator
    • Aluminium body, rubber grip
    • 60-100 psi operating pressure
    €109.53 €110.64
    €89.05 €89.95
  • Sealey pneumatic stapler with a black and grey design, featuring a trigger and magazine for staples, ideal for various fastening tasks.
    Not yet rated
    Sealey
    Air Nail/Staple Gun 10-50mm/10-40mm Capacity
    • Aluminium body, rubber grip
    • Nails 10-50mm, staples 13-40mm
    • Operating pressure 60-116psi
    €114.09 €115.25
    €92.76 €93.70
  • Air Staple Gun 13-32mm Capacity
    Not yet rated
    Sealey
    Air Staple Gun 13-32mm Capacity
    • Aluminium body, rubber grip
    • Staple capacity 13-32mm 18SWG
    • Safety trigger device
    €101.92 €102.95
    €82.86 €83.70

Pneumatic nailers drive fasteners with compressed air — typically 60–100 psi from a workshop compressor. Trigger response is faster than a hand tacker and there's no arm strain over long runs of fencing staples or trim nails. Most guns are single-fastener: a nailer takes coil or strip nails, a stapler takes staples, a combination tool handles both if you swap the nose and magazine.

Match the capacity range to the work. A 10–50 mm nailer covers skirting, architrave, and light cladding; shorter ranges suit upholstery tacks and panel pins. Staple guns list the leg length — 13–32 mm handles most sheet fixing and cable runs. Check the crown width if you're stapling insulation or membrane; narrow-crown staples (around 5 mm) are less visible in trim, wide-crown (10 mm and up) spread the load in softer material.

Magazine capacity matters on repetitive jobs. A 100-fastener strip is fine for occasional use; 5000-count bulk packs keep a production line running. Depth adjustment — usually a thumbwheel near the nose — sets how far the fastener sinks. Too shallow and the head sits proud; too deep and you tear the substrate. Check the exhaust direction: side-exhaust blows dust away from the operator, rear-exhaust can catch you in the face if you're working overhead.

Regular oil in the air line keeps the piston seals supple. A stuck driver or misfires usually mean dried seals or low pressure. Keep the nose clean — resin and splinters jam the feed. If you're switching fastener lengths, check the manual; some guns need a different spring or driver pin for the full range.