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The only one I've ever needed is an air powered Makita trim nailer for tiny pins. Works very well tacking mdf to pine or edge banding on shelf edges. Air tools all benefit from lighter weight and a compressor is a useful addition to the tool bank.
I suppose a lot depends on how big the nails are that you want to drive. I found it's easy to hit a larger nail with a hammer, it's only the tiny trim pins you need to have disappear into the finish and they are near impossible to hammer in without damaging the surface.
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It'll be for bits and pieces around the house. So a compressor is out. When I get my shed/workshop, I may consider a compressor. I'm really only thinking initially for trim pins for fitting architrave, beading etc. then for random bits of small wordwork for fun. I did the architrave in my office with the Tacwise, and as it not putting them in flush, meant I need to go over them with a hammer and punch which to me defeats the purpose of having the tool in the first place.
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Air tools all benefit from lighter weight
Not to mention the maintenance benefits. Couple of drops of oil every time you use it Vs stripping down and cleaning every 10,000 (very optimistic that number) nails (Paslode etc) or flogging it to an unsuspecting person on eBay when the warranty is about to run out because they are so complicated that out of warranty repairs are either impossible or will cost more than the price of a new unit.
Also, what's a good general electric nail gun for the DIY-er. Not framing or cabinetry grade. I have the nail only version of this (https://www.toolstation.com/tacwise-duo-35-stapler-nailer/p70520 - mine doesn't do staples) but it is shit. Never fully sinks the brads and the safety mechanism is really hit and miss. You have to press down in a really specific way then shift the gun slightly for it to fire. Which ends up with slips, marred surfaces, the rubber stopper breaking off and swearing.
Willing to spend a couple of hundred on something good as I forsee more beading, architrave and skirting work over the years.