Hi, we have a fair number of old architrave sets to refit as well as several flights of new stair spindles, and was wondering if this would be perfect for some sort of nailer?
We dont have a compressor so would need to buy both it and a gun if we need a phnumatic one, but then we saw the Titan one being sold by screwfix, its only around £30 and uses up to 30mm pins, gets good reveiws but,,I read one reveiw which said that he bought it to fix stair spindles and it wouldnt work because the nose of the gun has an interlock that requires the gun to be held flat before it will fire, it couldnt cope with the angle the pins needed to fire at.
So my questaion is, how do phnumatic nailers fair in these conditions, any thoughts most welcomed.
Steve.
I cannot comment with a huge amount of experience on this topic, however very recently I wanted to purchase a 23 gauge headless pin nailer, but found that it was near impossible to get an electric one (and they were >£300 where I could find one).
I have used the titan 18 gauge brad nailer (screwfix) and whilst it works fine, it has a very short cord, and also does not like to be held at different angles other than straight up or horizontal. There is nothing wrong with it, and I have used it for attaching skirting etc without issue.
The situation with trying to buy a headless pin nailer resulted in me purchasing a cheap small compressor (
this one), and then one of the
axminster headless pinners. I have been really pleased with it, firstly it doesn't care what angle it is being held at, it just works all the time. It fires much more rapidly and feels overall more solid. I will in due course get rid of my titan screwfix 18 gauge nailer and replace it with an 18 gauge
equivalent axi air nailer for the same nails.
The overall cost of a
compressor AND the
air nailer came to £130, versus the
cheapest electric model was £350!
I will get use out of the air compressor and the nailer for years to come, which significantly influenced my decision (as obviously I could just have used a hammer and some pins...) so if you are likely to use air for multiple future projects then maybe worthwile, otherwise it would be a waste of space.
I should also say that whilst I chose to buy a new one as I had very specific size requirements, I would usually look for used stuff, and you can pick up used compressors on facebook marketplace for <£50 (
i.e this) and nailers for <£30 (
i.e this), both of which you could likely sell for the same price when you finish using them for the job, therefore costing nothing overall!
EDIT - I must add to this, that if I did not have any desire to at any point own a 23 gauge headless pinner, I would go for a cordless battery powered model rather than air (probably dewalt because I have their batteries for some other tools already, but I know the ryobi stuff is cheaper so if I wasn't partial to dewalt I would probably get one of them)