Two Questions about Staples and Staple Gun
Two Questions about Staples and Staple Gun
With most staplers, you have to make sure that they dont rebound off the work surface as you are trying to get the staple to go -into- the workpiece. If the energy that was trying to drive the staple into the work instead goes into pushing the stapler UP, then the staple often doesnt drive in fully because of the lost energy and because the stapler is now off of the workpiece.
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That usually means you have to push down onto the stapler right over where the staple is going into the work to help make sure that the stapler is tight against the workpiece and that it stays that way while the staple is being driven in (in the blink of an eye).
Instead of just barely squeezing the trigger, get the tool into position, push it FIRMLY against the workpiece, and then quickly and firmly squeeze the trigger. If you lightly hold the tool and lightly squeeze the trigger, the tool will often rebound off the workpiece when you first trip the trigger and then your slow muscles push the tool against the work again and then your finger trips the trigger again and the cycle repeats. All in the blink of an eye. Also check to see if that powered tool has a setting on the trigger for single-fire only (until the trigger -and- the safety nosepiece both are released and reset) as opposed to slam-fire/sequential-fire mode (many pneumatic nailers/hammer/staplers have those two firing modes).
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