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Nail Guns

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Results for  Nail Guns

VEVOR's nail gun line offers a wide range of nailer types, power sources, and capacities for home building, industrial framing, finish carpentry, and do-it-yourself woodworking. Our collection includes small cordless brad nailers for trim and cabinet work, as well as fully pneumatic coil siding nailers. We also have high-capacity framing nailers that can drive a consistent depth into hardwood, softwood, OSB, and composite materials. Each product is designed to last with a durable driver mechanism, precise depth adjustment, and consistent fastener placement. These features help reduce misfires, surface damage, and rework costs in demanding professional jobsite and workshop settings.


VEVOR Nail Guns – Roofing Nailers and Siding Coil Nail Guns for Builders, and DIY Applications


Do you need professional nail gun tools for a construction crew, roofing operation, finish carpentry business, or do-it-yourself workshop? Consider features such as nailer type, power source, nail gauge, magazine capacity, and application material when searching for the right nail gun. These features determine whether your fastening workflow maintains the speed, accuracy, and surface quality your project needs on every shift. For every fastening job, from do-it-yourself trim work, framing, and siding installation, VEVOR nail guns have the driving power and long-lasting construction you need.


Choosing Nail Guns by Nailer Type and Power Source


Nailer type and power source are the two most important factors to consider when choosing a nail gun. They will tell you about the nail gauge, drive mechanism, magazine format, and the level of operator mobility you need to achieve consistent fastening results.


Roofing Nailers and Coil Siding Nail Guns with High-Capacity Pneumatic Fastening for Roofing and Siding Installation


For installing shingles, felt, and siding panels, the roofing nailers and coil siding nail guns provide the high-capacity, rapid-cycle pneumatic fastening performance needed. They use coil magazines, which hold many more nails per load than stick magazines. Hence, there are fewer reloads during continuous, large-area fastening runs on roofing decks and siding elevations. Reloading slows down production and increases labor time per square foot installed. Roofing nailers and siding coil nail guns feature a pneumatic drive mechanism that delivers consistent drive energy per fastener. 


It ensures that every roofing or siding nail is driven flush with, or to the exact set depth below, the shingle or panel surface, without overdriving. It can split shingles or underdrive, leaving nail heads protruding and breaking weathertight seals in roofing and siding envelope applications. For roofing, nail guns accept 15-degree to 16-degree wire-weld and plastic-strip coil nails in lengths from 1 inch to 1-3/4 inches. They also feature adjustable depth drives, 360-degree adjustable exhausts, and tool-free jam-clearing mechanisms that keep the jobsite productive when nail feed issues occur.


Brad Nailers and Cordless Brad Nailers with Precision Finish Fastening for Trim, Molding, and Cabinet Work


When it comes to trim, molding, and cabinet work, brad nailers and cordless brad nail guns drive 18-gauge brad nails for precise finish-fastening applications. The narrow-gauge fastener diameter means that there are fewer surface entry points in trim boards, door casings, window moldings, cabinet face frames, and decorative paneling. That means less filler and sanding are needed to hide nail heads in finish carpentry work. It is essential when surface appearance is the primary quality standard and fastener visibility directly affects the professional finish of the installation. 


The cordless brad nailer does not require a compressor, hose, or power outlet, unlike pneumatic nail guns. Instead, it has a battery-powered drive system that lets the operator move around the work area freely and work in areas without a compressed air supply. A variety of cordless and pneumatic nail guns feature sequential and contact firing modes, along with tool-free depth adjustment dials for precise nail countersink control. You can use them across different types of wood and panel thicknesses, with dry-fire lockout mechanisms that stop blank firing when the magazine is empty. It also protects the work surface from driver face-contact marks and magazines that hold 100 to 130 brad nails per load, enabling longer fastening runs.


Framing Nailers and Cordless Framing Nailers with Structural Wood Fastening for Wall Framing, Decking, and Sheathing


In framing nailers and cordless framing nailers, 21-degree to 30-degree plastic-collated or paper-tape-collated framing nails come in lengths ranging from 2 inches to 3 1/2 inches. They deliver the high-energy drive force needed to fully seat large-diameter framing nails into dimensional lumber, engineered wood products, LVL beams, and OSB sheathing. You can use them for structural wall framing, floor decking, roof sheathing, stair construction, and timber-joining applications where fastener hold strength and consistent drive depth are critical. 


Cordless framing nailers feature brushless motor drive systems powered by high-capacity lithium-ion batteries. These nail guns deliver pneumatic-equivalent drive energy without the compressor and hose setup time required by pneumatic nailers at the start of each work session. That means framing crews can start structural fastening as soon as they arrive at the jobsite and work continuously across large framing areas. They are not limited by hose lengths that make it hard to move around during wall panel assembly, joist installation, and sheathing application on multi-story construction projects.


Framing nailers feature adjustable magazine angles and selectable trigger modes for both sequential precision nailing and bump-fire rapid fastening. They also feature tool-free depth adjustment for consistent nail set depth, even when lumber moisture content and grain density change, which can affect drive resistance.


Evaluating Nail Guns by Capacity and Features


The magazine capacity and feature specifications of a nail gun are the two most important factors that determine its productivity. These features also determine how easy it is to use in your particular construction or woodworking environment.


Capacity: From 100-Brad Stick Magazines to High-Volume Coil Configurations for Continuous Fastening


There are different types of nail gun magazines. They range from compact brad nailers with 100 to 130 brad stick magazines to roofing nailers and siding coil nail guns with large coil magazines. The range covers high-precision finish carpentry jobs that require placing a single nail precisely. They also cover high-volume roofing and siding jobs that require fastening large areas quickly and continuously without reloading magazines frequently. 


Brad nailer stick magazines that hold 100 to 130 nails per load are suitable for installing trim, putting together cabinets, or installing molding. They are essential where moderate nail consumption per work session is important, and compact nailer size and weight are more important than nail-per-load capacity. Roofing nailers and coil siding nail guns have magazines that hold a lot more nails per load. That means that you do not have to reload as often during continuous shingle courses and siding panel runs. 


You can put 20 to 64 nails in a framing nailer stick magazine with collation angles ranging from 21 degrees to 30 degrees. The magazine capacity and nailer head geometry are balanced so that the nailer can reach wall plate corners, joist hangers, and blocking positions. The magazine does not interfere with structural fastening in tight framing configurations.


Key Features: Depth Adjustment, Firing Modes, Jam Clearing, and Anti-Dry-Fire Mechanisms


In addition to the basic drive power output, nail guns include several features that make them more useful and accurate when nailing. These include depth control, firing mode selection, jam management, and protective mechanisms that ensure consistent fastener placement quality and surface protection. Brad nailers, framing nailers, and roofing nailers all feature tool-free depth adjustment systems that let the operator set the exact nail countersink depth. 


It makes it easy to quickly adjust the depth between materials on projects that use more than one type of wood. The tool-free adjustment helps maintain consistent nail set depth even as the wood's moisture content changes. Many nail guns have two firing modes: sequential trigger actuation for precise single-nail placement and contact or bump-fire mode for rapid, continuous fastening. This allows you to switch between controlled finish fastening and high-speed production fastening with the same tool. It changes the firing mode to match the precision needs of each task without switching tools or adjusting the nailer's core drive mechanism. 


Tool-free jam-clearing access panels on the pneumatic and cordless brad nail guns let operators quickly clear nail-feed jams without tools. That means fastening can resume within seconds of a jam. Production also does not have to stop for long periods when nailers jam and need to be taken apart.


Shop VEVOR Nail Guns for Every Nailer Type, Power Source, and Fastening Application


VEVOR has all the nailer types, nail gauges, magazine configurations, and power sources needed for consistent, high-performance fastening. These include a small cordless brad nailer, high-capacity pneumatic roofing nailers, coil siding nail guns, and cordless framing nailers. Every VEVOR nail gun is designed to be a reliable, long-lasting investment in fastening productivity and workplace operational efficiency. Its durable driver mechanism construction, tool-free depth adjustment, dual firing mode selection, anti-dry-fire lockout, and jam-clearing access features make it a great choice. Every product comes with reliable after-sales service and reasonable prices. Check out the entire line of nail guns and improve your fastening efficiency today.


FAQs


What types of nail guns does VEVOR offer? 


Roofing nailers, brad nailers, cordless brad nailers, cordless brad nail guns, framing nailers, cordless framing nailers, coil siding nailers, and siding coil nail guns. Models are available in both pneumatic and cordless battery-powered versions, with nail sizes and lengths suitable for fastening to roofs, siding, frames, finish trim, and cabinets.


What is the difference between a brad nailer and a framing nailer? 


A brad nailer drives thin 18-gauge brad nails into trim, molding, and cabinet face frames to attach lightweight finishes. It is best done with a few surface entry points and a low risk of breaking. A framing nailer drives large 21-degree to 30-degree collated framing nails in lengths from 2-inch to 3-1/2-inch for structural wood fastening in wall framing, floor decking, and roof sheathing. Full nail seating in dimensional lumber and high hold strength are important performance requirements.


Do nail guns have anti-dry-fire protection? 


Yes. Some brad and framing nailers feature dry-fire lockout mechanisms that prevent firing when the magazine is empty. It helps keep the work surface safe from the driver face-contact marks that empty firing can make on finished trim and panel surfaces. It lets the operator know they need to reload before continuing to fasten so that blank drive cycles do not damage softwood surfaces or molding profiles.


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