Collection: Air Nailers

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Air Nailers are also known as Pneumatic Nail Guns. An air nailer is an efficient tool which uses compressed air, through an external compressor connected via a hose, to produce a powerful force that drives nails into materials of various strengths; such as wood, metal or concrete.

Image of air nailers used for professional assembly of a basket in the delivery of a project

What is an Air Nailer?

Air nailers are an efficient tool that leverage the force of compressed air through an external compressor to drive nails through some of the toughest materials. No matter whether the material of your project is wood, concrete or metal, we've got an ail nailer that will get the job done.

Types of Air Nailers

First Fix Air Nailers

A first fix air nailer is often used at the beginning of construction for deeper structural work that will be covered over with cosmetic finishes or plasterwork.

Our range of first fix nailers include coil nailers and strip nailers

Second Fix Air Nailers

Ideal for household DIY work, second fix air nailers use smaller nails for their fixings, and are often used for a delicate and tidy finish.

Air Nailer FAQs

How Do Air Nailers Compare to Staplers?

Air nailers are best used to drive nails into heavy duty construction projects such as decking, fencing, and assembling furniture where a strong and permanent fixture is needed.

Depending on your project, you will likely need finish nailers or brad nailers. A Brad nailer is more likely to be suitable for wood related projects, whereas hand staplers are most suitable for lightweight and subtle fastenings to upholstery projects or for use in other materials.

Whilst a brad nailer is typically used for smaller designs, a finish nailer is designed to drive larger and thicker nails into materials, and is often used for carpentry, installing flooring, assembling stairs or attaching trims.

What’s the Difference Between Coil Nailers and Strip Nailers?

Typically a coil nailer has a higher capacity for the number of nails it can hold at any one time. This means you can rapidly fire nails into a material, making them useful for larger projects such as flooring, roofing and decking.

In contrast, strip nailers use a straight or angled magazine of 20-40 nails at a time and are often used for precision work and smaller projects. 

Do you need nail guns for your projects? Contact us to find out more about how our nail gun stock could take your DIY tasks to the next level.