Secures 2 conductor #10, #12 and #14 non-metallic BX, mc, AC and UF cable to wood surfaces
Smooth saddle prevents damage to insulation
Fast and easy to install – both nails drive together without splitting wood
Nail heads are recessed for minimum exposure
UV-resistant polyethylene saddle will not rust, rot or deteriorate
Specification: Gardner Bender PS-350C Plastic Staple, ½”, Secures: Romex, UF and NM Electrical Cable, White
Manufacturer
GB Electrical
Part Number
PS-350C
Item Weight
0.16 ounces
Product Dimensions
1 x 4.3 x 4.2 inches
Country of Origin
USA
Item model number
PS-350C
Size
350 Pack
Color
4.2
Style
½ inch.
Material
Plastic
Item Package Quantity
1
Certification
Ul Listed
Included Components
Staple (350)
Batteries Included
No
Batteries Required
No
Warranty Description
1 Year
Photos: Gardner Bender PS-350C Plastic Staple, ½”, Secures: Romex, UF and NM Electrical Cable, White
13 reviews for Gardner Bender PS-350C Plastic Staple, ½”, Secures: Romex, UF and NM Electrical Cable, White
4.3out of 5
★★★★★
★★★★★
8
★★★★★
2
★★★★★
2
★★★★★
1
★★★★★
0
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★★★★★
ArchJeepR –
This is a much safer product than the old style metal wire staples.
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★★★★★
Boying –
I am very impressed with this product, Gardner Bender Insulated Staples because of its price and quality. It is so easy to use and I don’t understand the negative reviews, I encountered some of the problems they had and I would say that is nothing compared to its advantages, besides you got so many anyway that you can just use one again for trial and error and the next time you’d know exactly how to handle the situation. Overall, I am very happy with this product for helping me with my project and it was delivered expeditiously. I highly recommend this item without any hesitation or whatsoever.
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★★★★★
tito coleman –
Seemed like good idea, but the double nail on flimsy plastic proves to be much too fussy for efficient installation. Prefer solid staple with plastic insulation for volume wire work…
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★★★★★
Amazon Customer –
Good product
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★★★★★
Rob –
They drive into a new soft pine 2×4 but bend easily if you try to drive it near a knot, southern yellow pine, or old growth wood. For some reason, GB used the softest, lowest strength nails made.
Strongly recommend using Morris staples instead. Morris staples don’t bend unless poorly driven since they use nails that are harder than wood.
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★★★★★
Omar Siddique –
Staple-style cable stays.
This size is juuuust barely high enough for normal-jacket cat6 ethernet cabling. It would be easier with flat cables, and not ideal for shielded variants (where you don’t want to squash the foil-lined jacket — go up a size).
It’s a little effort to drive into baseboard (but not hard), much easier with drywall. I’d hate to have to put all 50 into a baseboard, but a couple were easy-peasy. The nails are not captive, so you can remove one if you don’t need to pin down both sides.
Pictured: Holding a cat6 cable in place. Because of the carpet, I only put the top nail in. That also provides some wiggle room if I need to slide the cable. Ignore the dirty wall that needs paint…
Especially for the price, Recommended.
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★★★★★
Cat –
Good quality and great quantity for the price. The nails are long though so if you’re tacking on 1/2″ plywood on top of concrete, the nails will hit the concrete before setting properly on the plastic.
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★★★★★
Dgreg –
These didn’t work for me, but they also weren’t expensive, so I’m not very upset about it. The nails were too thin and bent too easily. I imagine that it would work okay in many situations where major renovations are taking place or in new construction. However, I was working in a cramped attic trying to wire my new recessed lighting. If I didn’t hit the nail perfectly, it bent over and was unusable, which was rather challenging in the heat, dim light, and cramped spaces. I quickly gave up on these.
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★★★★★
Nguyen duy trinh –
Good quality
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★★★★★
Colmarie –
I’m using these in drywall to help organize my networking closet. I’m doing 2 at a time cables of coax or cat6 in this (right side of pic) and these work very well. they stand up to a little tug if you’re moving wires around. None have popped out yet while I have made several adjustments to organization. these work great.
I used this to hold electrical wall wire (NM 12/2) to joists. I like these, but I have to say that the nails bent so easily that I replaced them with other stainless steel brads. The brad length is “long,” but I liked that since I was hanging 120V and 240V (20A, 60 Hz) cabling. The white part does not break easily, but they can be mashed to “ugly” pretty easily.
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★★★★★
Mamun –
Good product at this price , comparing to the retail store price.
Helpful(0)Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
★★★★★
Ecolometrics –
Used this to run ethernet cable. It is wide enough to fit three cables.
One trick to be aware of is being mindful of which nail you start hammering first, since it pulls the other nail out of square with the wall. In some cases if flush against a corner will make fitting/aligning a hammer head difficult.
ArchJeepR –
This is a much safer product than the old style metal wire staples.
Boying –
I am very impressed with this product, Gardner Bender Insulated Staples because of its price and quality. It is so easy to use and I don’t understand the negative reviews, I encountered some of the problems they had and I would say that is nothing compared to its advantages, besides you got so many anyway that you can just use one again for trial and error and the next time you’d know exactly how to handle the situation. Overall, I am very happy with this product for helping me with my project and it was delivered expeditiously. I highly recommend this item without any hesitation or whatsoever.
tito coleman –
Seemed like good idea, but the double nail on flimsy plastic proves to be much too fussy for efficient installation. Prefer solid staple with plastic insulation for volume wire work…
Amazon Customer –
Good product
Rob –
They drive into a new soft pine 2×4 but bend easily if you try to drive it near a knot, southern yellow pine, or old growth wood. For some reason, GB used the softest, lowest strength nails made.
Strongly recommend using Morris staples instead. Morris staples don’t bend unless poorly driven since they use nails that are harder than wood.
Omar Siddique –
Staple-style cable stays.
This size is juuuust barely high enough for normal-jacket cat6 ethernet cabling. It would be easier with flat cables, and not ideal for shielded variants (where you don’t want to squash the foil-lined jacket — go up a size).
It’s a little effort to drive into baseboard (but not hard), much easier with drywall. I’d hate to have to put all 50 into a baseboard, but a couple were easy-peasy. The nails are not captive, so you can remove one if you don’t need to pin down both sides.
Pictured: Holding a cat6 cable in place. Because of the carpet, I only put the top nail in. That also provides some wiggle room if I need to slide the cable. Ignore the dirty wall that needs paint…
Especially for the price, Recommended.
Cat –
Good quality and great quantity for the price. The nails are long though so if you’re tacking on 1/2″ plywood on top of concrete, the nails will hit the concrete before setting properly on the plastic.
Dgreg –
These didn’t work for me, but they also weren’t expensive, so I’m not very upset about it. The nails were too thin and bent too easily. I imagine that it would work okay in many situations where major renovations are taking place or in new construction. However, I was working in a cramped attic trying to wire my new recessed lighting. If I didn’t hit the nail perfectly, it bent over and was unusable, which was rather challenging in the heat, dim light, and cramped spaces. I quickly gave up on these.
Nguyen duy trinh –
Good quality
Colmarie –
I’m using these in drywall to help organize my networking closet. I’m doing 2 at a time cables of coax or cat6 in this (right side of pic) and these work very well. they stand up to a little tug if you’re moving wires around. None have popped out yet while I have made several adjustments to organization. these work great.
The black clips are these https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B017VXNFVO/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
In the future, i think i’d use a staple gun also made by Gardner Bender as I was loaned one for some electrical work and it was simply quicker than hammer nail. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000MWTVJC/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Greg –
I used this to hold electrical wall wire (NM 12/2) to joists. I like these, but I have to say that the nails bent so easily that I replaced them with other stainless steel brads. The brad length is “long,” but I liked that since I was hanging 120V and 240V (20A, 60 Hz) cabling. The white part does not break easily, but they can be mashed to “ugly” pretty easily.
Mamun –
Good product at this price , comparing to the retail store price.
Ecolometrics –
Used this to run ethernet cable. It is wide enough to fit three cables.
One trick to be aware of is being mindful of which nail you start hammering first, since it pulls the other nail out of square with the wall. In some cases if flush against a corner will make fitting/aligning a hammer head difficult.
Having more color options would be nice.