MILWAUKEE M18FFN21-0C 18v FUEL Framing Nailer BODY ONLY
MILWAUKEE M18FFN21-0C 18v FUEL Framing Nailer BODY ONLY
What’s Included
- Carry Case
- This is a Body Only machine, supplied without a battery or charger
- Number of Batteries Supplied: 0
- Voltage: 18v
Product Overview
Part No: 4933478993(TTIP4933478993)
Features & Benefits
- Fires standard framing nails which fits an angled magazine at 20° to 22°
- Ready to Fire Nail Technology eliminates ramp-up time between each nail discharge
- No gas cartridges and no cleaning required, designed to deliver durability and reliability to the most demanding users with very little maintenance
- Two mode selection allows for sequential fire for precision or bump fire for speed
- Tool-free, quick and easy depth adjustment to assure nails are driven sub-flush
- Dry-Fire lockout stops the tool being fired when there are no nails left in the magazine
- Fires up to 700 nails per charge on a REDLITHIUM 5.0 Ah battery pack for maximum productivity
- Excellent power to consistently seat nails sub-flush to the surface in hardwoods
- Quick access and easy clearing of jams
- LED work light illuminates the work surface for better placement of nails
- The DNA of our FUEL platform redefines the balance of cordless technologies. MILWAUKEE's POWERSTATE brushless motor, REDLITHIUM battery pack and REDLINK PLUS electronic intelligence delivering outstanding power, run time and durability
- Flexible battery system: works with all MILWAUKEE M18 batteries
Technical Specification
- Voltage: 18v
- Collation angle: 20 - 22°
- Magazine capacity nails: 51
- Nail diameter: 2.8 - 3.8mm
- Nail type: 50 - 90mm
- Weight with battery pack: 5.0Kg
- Sound power level (Lwa)(dB(A)): 101.6
- Sound power level uncertainty (dB(A)): 3
- Sound pressure level (Lpa)(dB(A)): 90.6
- Sound pressure level uncertainty (dB(A)): 3
- Vibration level: 5.53m/s²
- Vibration uncertainty: 1.5m/s²
FAQs
Cordless Nail Guns and Staplers are incredibly useful but choosing the right model for you can be tricky. There are lots of options available, both in terms of the tools themselves and the fasteners they use.
The first thing to think about is the power source for your tool. Will it use a battery, in the same way as other power tools, be air-powered via a compressor or utilise gas fuel cells? Historically, battery powered tools have tended to struggle when driving longer length fasteners into hardwoods, but with Makita developing new 40v options, that is changing. Nailers which use Gas Fuel Cells are often capable of working with a larger nail range, but the cells have a specific shelf life and will require replacement.
Another thing to think about is the magazine capacity; the larger the capacity, the more nails you can fire between magazine changes.
The first thing to consider is what you need it to do. There are different kinds of Nailers – first fix machines use larger nails and are designed to add rigidity, to a project. Second fix, or ‘finishing’ Nailers use smaller, more discreet nails for work where a clean finish is required, such as door frames. These can vary in cost, performance and in the type of nail they use. One way to pick the right tool is to consider the work you’ll be doing and the nail size you most use, then pick a nail gun to suit the job, as different types of nailguns will use different nail lengths. For instance, a Brad Nailer, which is a type of finishing Nailgun, will typically use a nail of 15-40mm length, while a Framing Nailer will usually use a nail between 50 and 90mm long.
That depends what sort of projects you’ll be doing and where you need your nails to go. The terms ‘straight’ and ‘angled’ refer to the magazine; an angled tool will enable you to work in corners, or anywhere else you would be working at an angle. They’re great for working in tight spaces and can usually hold longer nails because of the size of their magazines. In addition, they tend to be lighter and easier to store than a straight nailer.
Straight nailers use thinner nails – they can’t go below 16 Gauge – and tend to be heavier more difficult to transport than angled nailers, but are frequently cheaper to buy.
Brushed motors use carbon brushes to transfer power from the fixed part of the motor to the rotor. This creates a reliable and relatively inexpensive motor, but brushed motors do require regular maintenance, in order to either clean the brushes or replace them as they wear out. A brushless motor, by contrast, uses a magnet mounted on the rotor to generate the power and electrical switching to perform the function carried out by the brushes. The additional complexity of the motor’s working means that brushless motors are usually more expensive than brushed.
The voltage of your machine will be partially determined by how it drives nails. For instance, a Paslode Framing Nailer which uses a gas fuel cell to fire each nail might have a battery with only 7.4v, while a Makita XGT Brad Nailer, which is designed to used on jobsites and relies on its battery entirely, is a 40v tool. Consider the work you’ll be doing with your Nailgun or Stapler and how that fits in with the other items in your tool set; this will help you to select the tool which best meets your needs.
Delivery & Returns
Warranty
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