Freeman PCN65 Chiodatrice pneumatica per rivestimenti a bobina da 15 gradi 2-1/2" con pistola a gancio per cintura in metallo regolabile

Brand:Freeman

3.2/5

261.44

Scarico regolabile a 360 gradi: consente all'utente di dirigere comodamente l'aria lontano dal viso. Impugnatura Comfort Grip: riduce l'affaticamento durante i lunghi turni e aumenta la precisione del posizionamento del dispositivo di fissaggio. Suggerimento per la sicurezza No Mar: previene i danni alla superficie di lavoro e garantisce risultati professionali a casa o in cantiere. Secchio trasparente: scopri a colpo d'occhio quando i dispositivi di fissaggio si stanno esaurendo. Regolazione della profondità senza attrezzi: basta ruotare manualmente la rotella di regolazione della profondità per modificare la profondità di guida dei chiodi per vari progetti e materiali. Fire Lock: impedisce lo sparo accidentale per sicurezza quando non viene utilizzato. Scatto con attivazione a contatto: in grado di sparare a colpo d'occhio per la velocità o un singolo sparo sequenziale per la precisione. Costruito per durare: la lama di trasmissione in acciaio temprato monopezzo e il cilindro in alluminio anodizzato si traducono in uno strumento pneumatico durevole e resistente ai danni. Chiodi compatibili: chiodi per rivestimenti in bobina con fascicolazione in plastica da 15 gradi da 1-1/4 – 2-1/2 e chiodi per rivestimenti in bobina con fascicolazione in filo da 15 gradi da 1-3/4 – 2-1/2 (diametro 0,09 – 0,113). Applicazioni edili: progettato per rivestimenti, scandole di cedro, rivestimenti per tetti e pareti e progetti di recinzioni in legno.

Scarico regolabile a 360 gradi: consente all'utente di dirigere comodamente l'aria lontano dal viso. Impugnatura Comfort Grip: riduce l'affaticamento durante i lunghi turni e aumenta la precisione del posizionamento del dispositivo di fissaggio. Suggerimento per la sicurezza No Mar: previene i danni alla superficie di lavoro e garantisce risultati professionali a casa o in cantiere. Secchio trasparente: scopri a colpo d'occhio quando i dispositivi di fissaggio si stanno esaurendo. Regolazione della profondità senza attrezzi: basta ruotare manualmente la rotella di regolazione della profondità per modificare la profondità di guida dei chiodi per vari progetti e materiali. Fire Lock: impedisce lo sparo accidentale per sicurezza quando non viene utilizzato. Scatto con attivazione a contatto: in grado di sparare a colpo d'occhio per la velocità o un singolo sparo sequenziale per la precisione. Costruito per durare: la lama di trasmissione in acciaio temprato monopezzo e il cilindro in alluminio anodizzato si traducono in uno strumento pneumatico durevole e resistente ai danni. Chiodi compatibili: chiodi per rivestimenti in bobina con fascicolazione in plastica da 15 gradi da 1-1/4 – 2-1/2 e chiodi per rivestimenti in bobina con fascicolazione in filo da 15 gradi da 1-3/4 – 2-1/2 (diametro 0,09 – 0,113). Applicazioni edili: progettato per rivestimenti, scandole di cedro, rivestimenti per tetti e pareti e progetti di recinzioni in legno.
Brand Freeman
Brand ‎Freeman
Color Black
Color ‎Black
Customer Reviews 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,666 ratings 4.2 out of 5 stars
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‎No
Item Dimensions LxWxH 13.25 x 11 x 5 inches
Item model number ‎PCN65
Item Weight ‎5.5 pounds
Manufacturer ‎Freeman Pneumatics
Manufacturer Part Number ‎PCN65
Material One piece hardened steel drive blade and anodized aluminum cylinder
Material Type ‎One piece hardened steel drive blade and anodized aluminum cylinder
Number of Items ‎1
Product Dimensions ‎13.25 x 11 x 5 inches
Style Gun

3.2

13 Review
5 Star
64
4 Star
17
3 Star
6
2 Star
4
1 Star
9

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Scritto da: jar buyer
Overall not bad for the price.
I used it on Hardie fiber cement planks on my ADU. I used 2.25 inch galvanized ring shanks nails in Southern California spring of 2023. I would say this gun is worth buying. I think part of the issue was I was required to use 1” rigid insulation over 5/8” OSB which was over the 2”x 6” framing. Maybe it was too much bounce on the rigid insulation.
Scritto da: Ann
Great siding nailer
This was the first time I replaced siding. It was an easier job than I expected. The Freeman nail gun worked perfect. I have used a Freeman floor nailer before and it also worked very well. It was a good value.
Scritto da: Loreki
Initially dangerous, until it "broke in". Readily double-fires for non-pros like me.
I read the directions. The instructions call for the gun to be oiled before use, but the instructions are extremely confusing about which type of lubricant to use, saying seemingly contradictory things, something like "use pneumatic tool lubricant" and "don't use air tool oil". These sound like the same thing. How am I supposed to purchase lubricant for this thing if I don't know what type to get? So I looked up online what type of oil is recommended for pneumatic nail guns, and the most common, most consistent, generic recommendations seemed to be 3-in-1 oil and mineral oil. I happened to have some food-grade mineral oil so I used a couple drops of that, only to later discover that the box had a small bottle of lube hidden away. Was use of mineral oil the cause for what I was about to experience? I don't know... I loaded the gun with 1.75" stainless nails, set air pressure, connected the air line, and pulled the trigger in preparation for driving a test nail. WTF WAS THAT?! It fired a nail! The instructions said I had to press the gun against the work piece before it would fire. Maybe I have gun adjusted incorrectly? Let's try increasing the drive depth... test... premature ejection again! Okay, reduce drive depth... test, and again! Okay, reduce air pressure... test... again! Reduce air pressure below 90 psi... test... not firing at all now. So I figured the instructions were wrong. I set pressure to where the gun was firing nails again, place the gun against the test piece, pulled the trigger, and the nail goes deeper than I want. Fiddle with depth setting on the gun, nails go deeper than desired right up to the point where the gun won't fire. Hmmm..... I guess cedar fencing and pine 2x4s with 1.75" nails is too light, but this isn't a catastrophic issue, so we'll just go with it. Used the gun for a couple hours. I'd put the gun up against the boards, pull the trigger and, most times, the gun would fire one nail. It was double-firing the vast majority of the time, but usually didn't pick up a nail on the 2nd blast, so fine. But a fair number of times it did drive two nails. I tried various ways of holding and triggering the gun, and the best I could do for a while was to position the gun a little above the board, move the gun toward the board, pull the trigger just before contact was made, allow a bounce. Went half a day like this, and the double fires seemed to be going down. Also noted that, eventually, the gun stopped the fear-inducing trait of firing nails on trigger pull without contact. Once that point was reached, things went much more smoothly, and the gun operated as described in the manual. I'm not a pro. This was my first time using a siding nail gun. Even with the gun working properly I'd still get a double-nail every twenty shots or so. One of my teenage relatives had much better success than I did, so this is probably a skill and body type thing. But, even with all the double-taps, the gun never once jammed on me. I drove about 1200 1.75" SS ringed nails putting up a fence. Worked well enough for the money for this crude job. Want absolutely-consistent shot-to-shot driving depth? Get a different tool, or practice. Want real adjustability? Get a different tool. No experience with nail guns and want minimal hassle? Get a tool that requires the trigger be squeezed and reset for each shot. Want a cheap tool for a small, one-off project? This just might be the tool for you. I don't have much use for this tool now my project is complete, so I'll probably sell it for half what I paid, and still come out ahead versus renting a tool for a few days from the orange depot.
Scritto da: Gonzalez
Great value but double fires when using smaller compressors
So, I own at least 10 nail guns - from trim to roofing nailers. I was in need of a new coil siding nailer after losing my Hitachi. Yet, I was hesitant to spend $350 again for a job I don't do often. So I come across this at 60% of the price. My first impression of this gun was mixed. It had better features than the Hitachi and Dewalt I have used such as bump fire, rafter hooks, adjustable exhaust, and single or automatic firing. That is, most of the professional brands don't include these or have an awkward handicap that prevents you from using them - like a fixed hook, trigger installations, and locked exhaust. However, it is apparent that this gun isn't made for continuous daily use when you look at the trigger, coil gaurd, and depth adjustment. The trigger is probably the weakest and cheapest one I have ever used. The coil guard won't survive a hard fall. The depth adjustable is hard to use. It also isn't as balanced as most other nailers and is significantly larger in size. As to how well it performs, well I am more than satisfied. It shoots nails just as well as the Makita, Hitachi, and Dewalt siding nailers I have used. From fiber cement to hardwood. The results are great - most of the time. The biggest issue is that this gun is a lot more prone to double firing than most. Double firing is a significant issue. It can crack your fiber cement or split your hard wood. This gun is very prone to double fire when you are using smaller compressors. To better explain, you shouldn't be using pancake compressors or compact low cfm (>5cfm@90) anyway. Coil and roofing jailers use significantly more air due to the nature of their work as siding and shingles use a lot more nails per area. Yet, most people and professionals don't care. So this if for you pancake users out there - don't buy this gun or you will have trouble. This gun will double fire when you are are driving a lot of nails and your compressor does not have enough air to keep up with the demand. Weird huh? Most guns don't fire or they dry fire when the pressure is too low or their isn't enough air (volume) to meet the demand. I discovered this after trying it out on all 5 of my compressors - pancakes, engine driven 6 gallon, 25 gallon, and 60 gallon. No surprise, it double fired often on my pancakes and engine driven but never once double fired on the 25 or 60 gallon. From there on out, I have only used in on my 25 gallon and rarely double fired. As far as the jamming, all coil nailers do it. It is just the nature of this mechanism. Wire fasteners bind and adhesive builds up. This gun jammed just as often as all the others I have used. Overall, I would recommend this gun to most consumers and those professionals who do siding on the small scale like repairs or touch ups.
Scritto da: Bhola Bhala
Amazing gun, way to load and operate
Overall a very useful tool. It's very easy to load the magazine and this thing will keep firing even with a very low pressure. The only issue I'm having is that at a high pressure around 90 PSI this thing double fires sometimes triple fires
Scritto da: Triesje Flagg
Good value, it works fine if you do this.....
Lots of reviews here talk about double firing. I too experienced this at first. I ran this from a small cylindrical compressor. Initially, double fires were horrible, but as I read the instructions, it became apparent that there is only one way to use this gun; hold the trigger down, align where you want it and bump fire. I nailed 90 8"x12' Hardie planks this way without one double fire. That's over 1000 nails. Now, was every nail driven perfect and flush? No. some might be sticking up by 1/32 or and 1/8, but most were nice and flush. Considering the cost, this is a good tool if used correctly. I am a DIYer, and this was my first use of this type of gun. Not critical of other reviews, I just stumbled on a way to make this gun work, maybe exactly the way it was designed.
Scritto da: Jose c
Good price
Good price and does what it needs to do!
Scritto da: Amazon Customer
Satisfacción trabaja muy bien
Buena herramienta la recomiendo
Scritto da: Amazon Customer
Great tool great price
I was initially quite skeptical about buying this nailer, but the price was very attractive. As it turned out it functioned above my expectations. As with most nail guns, one needs to initially get used to the feel so that it doesn't staple twice on a bounce back. I used this for a Hardie Board install and it worked flawlessly. My intent was to sell this nail gun after completing the job.... but I'm thinking it's going to be a keeper. I will have to admit that I had at one time not placed the nails at the top of the feeder and this caused an issue of a nail getting stuck in the gun. There is no quick release of any sort to remove such a sticky situation and the only way to get things unstuck was to turn the gun upside down and force the pin to retract. However this did not impact future nailing. I suggest new owners ensure coiled nails are placed carefully at the top of the feed track to avoid problems.
Scritto da: Konrad
Awesome budget nailer.
I bought this nail gun for the purpose of nailing fence boards. It’s relatively light and comfortable. Most importantly I have not had a single misfire or jam. It’s worked perfectly for me! There are more expensive larger brand name nailers out there but I didn’t want to spend a fortune on something I’m probably not going to use very often. Just remember to put a few drops of oil in it before using out of the box and you should have no problems.
Scritto da: hernan
Worth every penny!
This is my first nail gun and a bit doubting its quality because it is cheaper than most brands. Like most new tools you need to get use to it and get the feel how it works. After using it on my shed project this nail gun is worth every penny I paid for it. It functioned perfectly and never jammed. Of course it will double fire occasionally but it is not the guns fault it is how you react to it’s natural recoil specially if you are firing it in an awkward position. A must have tool for handyman like me
Scritto da: Stefan
Stopped working after 450 nails
The nailer feels flimsy and delicate but did it's job OK. It misfired every 20-30 nails, sometimes requiring to open and set the nails again. It was not perfect, but for the price could be tolerated. After driving about 450 1.25 inch nails into cedar shingles, a gush of air came out from the front where the nails come out and the piston pushing the nails remained stuck in the out position as shown in the picture. It could no longer be used. I returned it for a refund and purchased a Bostitch instead.
Scritto da: Amazon Customer
Choose something better
Wow.. This nailer is up to $270 and i paid $140 at the time and let me tell you, it's not worth $100. I bought this to sheath shed roofs which I do on the side. Right out of the box gun started double firing every 5th shot. I thought it might need a break in, so I used it on a total of 5 sheds just to sheath the roof. It always kept double firing even after it was oiled before every use. Stay away.

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