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you pull the trigger and the nail shoots out and into the wood.
The trigger of a pneumatic nail gun has nothing to do with the pressure. The pressure exerted is generated by the compressor and then the impact hammer inside the cylinder of the nail gun. If you are having a no firing or misfiring problem the 'o' ring around the piston is possibly broken or dry . -Have you been regularly using air tool oil, - NOT oiling is the commonest reason for this failure.
It can be, yes. Especially if the nails are rusty.
The gun is permanently charged with air, when you push the foot in and pull the trigger air is released to the piston which strikes down to eject the nail and then returns to 'load 'position. If the gun is operating properly, the foot (where the nail comes out) MUST be depressed against a solid object to release the trigger. -Always remember to put a drop or two of air tool oil in the air entry every hundred shots or so.-BE SAFE Never point an air nail gun at anyone !
It was dangerous. Obviously. Why has every other recalled thing been recalled?
Most that I have seen are on the left side of the gun barrell near the bolt and trigger. Most that I have seen are on the left side of the gun barrell near the bolt and trigger.
50. caliber machine gun....period
The nail gun was invented in the 1950's
The nail gun was invented in the early 1950's
You can buy a quality nail gun online at this site (FreshDeals.com). For $31.01 you can purchase a fantastic Stanley nail gun from them.
When a gun fires more than 1 shot per pull of the trigger. In most cases, pull the trigger. Gun fires, ejects fired cartridge, loads fresh cartridge, fires it, and repeats until you release the trigger or run out of ammunition.
Alan's finger was on the gun's trigger.