A packet of staples commonly used in the home or office
Staples in use, showing the front and the back side. The back side shows the end flipped outwards on the left and inwards on the right
The Dovetail Staples from Pasargadae - World's Oldest Staple - 6th c. BCE A staple is a type of two-pronged, usually metal fastener for joining or binding materials together. Small staples are used with a stapler to attach pieces of paper together while larger staples might be used with a hammer or staple gun for fencing, masonry, roofing and cardboard boxes. Image File history File links Broom_icon. ...
staple (fasteners) File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
staple (fasteners) File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 472 pixelsFull resolution (1938 Ã 1144 pixel, file size: 360 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Three views of staples. ...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 472 pixelsFull resolution (1938 Ã 1144 pixel, file size: 360 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Three views of staples. ...
Image File history File links Pasargadae_Swallow-Tail_Staples. ...
Image File history File links Pasargadae_Swallow-Tail_Staples. ...
Pasargadae (Persian: پاسارگاد) was a city in ancient Persia, and is today an archaeological site and one of Irans UNESCO World Heritage Sites. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
A fastener is a hardware device that mechanically joins or affixes two or more objects together. ...
A standard office stapler A Stapler combines together sheets of paper or other materials by driving a thin metal staple through the sheets and folding over the ends to secure the paper. ...
A claw hammer For other uses, see Hammer (disambiguation). ...
Hand-operated staple gun with staples Accu staple gun A staple gun is a powerful hand-held machine used to drive heavy metal staples into wood or masonry. ...
A selection of forms of barbed wire. ...
Masonry in action; a Mason at work. ...
A roof tiled in imitation of thatch at Croyde, north Devon, England Rooftops in Vietnam A roof is the top covering of a building that prevents the ingress of weather into the building interior. ...
Staple corrugated box Cardboard boxes are industrially prefabricated boxes, which are primarily used for packaging goods and materials. ...
Surgical staples are used for the closing of incisions and wounds, a function also performed by sutures. Surgical staples holding a knee replacement surgery wound closed. ...
Sutures are the stitches doctors, and especially surgeons, use to hold skin, organs, blood vessels and all other tissues of the human body together, after they have been severed in minor or major surgery. ...
Staples have some advantages over other fasteners: - Most kinds of staples are easier to produce than nails or screws.
- The crown of the staple can be used to bridge materials butted together.
- The crown can bridge a piece and fasten it without puncturing with a leg on either side, e.g. fastening cable to wood framing.
- The crown provides greater surface area than other comparable fasteners. This is helpful with thinner materials.
The legs of a staple can be allowed to protrude out the back side and folded over to provide greater binding than the friction of straight legs. (Note: The term "stapling" is used for both fastening with straight or bent legs; however, when differentiating between the two, the term "tacking" is used for straight-leg stapling, while the term "stapling" is used for bent-leg stapling when being contrasted with "tacking".) A pile of nails. ...
Screws come in a variety of shapes and sizes for different purposes. ...
6 or 15cm outside diameter, oil-cooled cables, traversing the Grand Coulee Dam throughout. ...
The most common staples are the ones used for paper. They are almost exclusively applied with a mechanical stapler which clinches the legs after they pass through the paper. Staples of this type were used on a desktop stapling machine, which was developed in 1877 and registered under US Patent No. 195,603. Modern staples for a paper stapler are made from wires glued together and bent to form a long strip of staples. The papers to be fastened are placed between the main body and the anvil. The papers are pinched between the body and the anvil, then a drive blade pushes on the crown of the staple on the end of the staple strip. The staple breaks from the end of the strip and the legs of the staple are forced through the paper. As the legs hit the grooves in the anvil they are bent to hold the pages together. Many staplers have an anvil in the form of a "pinning" or "stapling" switch. This allows a choice between bending out or in. The outward bent staples are easier to remove and are for temporary fastening or "pinning". Most staplers are capable of stapling without the anvil to drive straight leg staples for tacking. A standard office stapler A Stapler combines together sheets of paper or other materials by driving a thin metal staple through the sheets and folding over the ends to secure the paper. ...
For other uses, see Anvil (disambiguation). ...
There are various types of staples for paper, including heavy-duty staples, designed for use on documents 20, 50, or over 100 pages thick. There are also speedpoint staples, which have slightly sharper points so they can go through paper more easily. Staple guns do not have backing anvils and are exclusively used for tacking and they typically have staples made from thicker metal. Some staple guns have round heads for fastening small cables, e.g. phone or cable TV, without damaging the cable. Note: staple guns are not used in surgery. Hand-operated staple gun with staples Accu staple gun A staple gun is a powerful hand-held machine used to drive heavy metal staples into wood or masonry. ...
Staples for larger cables are typically driven by hand with a hammer as are staples for fencing. A fence in Westtown Township, Pennsylvania. ...
The large staples found on corrugated cardboard boxes have folded legs, but they are applied from the outside and do not use an anvil; jaw-like appendages push through the cardboard alongside the legs and bend them from the outside. Saddle stitch staplers, also known as "booklet staplers," feature a longer reach from the pivot point than general-purpose staplers and are used to bind pages into a booklet or "signature". Some, such as the Ring King, can also use "loop-staples" that enable the user to integrate folded matter into ring books and binders. Saddle Stitch staplers are designed to insert staples into the spine or saddle of folded matter such as catalogs and manuals. ...
However, the staple in ancient times had different functions. They were used in masonry works, in which it was invented in ancient Iran in 6th century BCE during the reign of Cyrus the Great. These staple which is known as the "swallowtail staples", were used for tightening the stones together. Iranian architecture created this device for the construction of Pasargadae. Cyrus the Great (Old Persian: KÅ«ruÅ¡,[1] modern Persian: Ú©ÙØ±ÙØ´ بزرگ, Kurosh-e Bozorg) (c. ...
Pasargadae (Persian: پاسارگاد) was a city in ancient Persia, and is today an archaeological site and one of Irans UNESCO World Heritage Sites. ...
Specifications
In the United States, the specifications for non-medical staples are described in ASTM F1667-05, Standard Specification for Driven Fasteners: Nails, Spikes, and Staples. A typical office staple is designated as F 1667 STFCC-04. ST indicates staple, FC indicates flat top crown, C indicates cohered (joined into a strip), and 04 is the dash number for a staple with a length of 0.250 inch, a leg thickness of 0.020 inch, a leg width of 0.030 inch, and a crown width of 0.500 inch. ASTM International is an international standards developing organization that develops and publishes voluntary technical standards for a wide range of materials, products, systems, and services. ...
Outside the United States, office staples are often described as 24/6 or 26/6, where the first number is the gauge of the wire, and the second number is the length of the shank (leg) in milimeters. American wire gauge (AWG), also known as the Brown and Sharpe wire gauge, is used in the United States and other countries as a standard method of denoting wire diameter, especially for nonferrous, electrically conducting wire. ...
See also Staple remover (opposing wedge type) A staple remover is a device that allows for the quick removal of a staple from a material without causing damage. ...
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