RJNeal said:I’m with you SoonerFan. Also I don’t think it will be looking that pretty with wear and tear.
Vondawg said:Wall candy craziness
Vondawg said:Wall candy craziness
squall_line said:RJNeal said:I’m with you SoonerFan. Also I don’t think it will be looking that pretty with wear and tear.
If it's anodized, it should hold up rather well.
If it's just a spray coating, it'll be worn and ugly before you open the box after the delivery driver sails it across your driveway.
Cheese said:[attachimg=2]
European higher-end gasoline engines routinely use this tech for a decade or so. The first gen that came out in the 2000s had some reliability issues after 100k miles or so with corrosion. But those were solved by now. Is not really as simple as one's run of the mill anodising, but yeah, good-enough for a couple hundred thousand miles. Basic engines did not have this until the recent efficiency craze - the treatment is relatively expensive.Packard said:...
In fact, some aluminum block race engines do not have cast iron liners in the cylinders, but rely on the hardness of the anodized aluminum. That is done for the improved heat transfer and the tighter tolerances they allow. The engines generally will be rebuilt for each race. So, good for 100 to 500 miles.
The American car, the Chevy Vega tried to use this process for passenger cars, and it was a disaster.
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Crazyraceguy said:The saw only touches the track on the sides of the raised rib anyway. The main contact is the green rub strips.
This however, hurts my head. Why not just plunge and push with the left hand......and be done with it. That looks so awkward, maybe even painful. Looks stupid, even if it doesn't hurt.
Cheese said:Ya I agree, it's like some weird "better to be safe than sorry" thing. Probably some Germanic focus group thing. [eek]
The funny thing is, I can see some more serious consequences happening if there was a kick back because of his hand placement and the difficulty in trying to "just let go" when things run amuck.
Cheese said:Crazyraceguy said:The saw only touches the track on the sides of the raised rib anyway. The main contact is the green rub strips.
This however, hurts my head. Why not just plunge and push with the left hand......and be done with it. That looks so awkward, maybe even painful. Looks stupid, even if it doesn't hurt.
Ya I agree, it's like some weird "better to be safe than sorry" thing. Probably some Germanic focus group thing. [eek]
The funny thing is, I can see some more serious consequences happening if there was a kick back because of his hand placement and the difficulty in trying to "just let go" when things run amuck.
On another note, the rail surface should be free of saw movement marks as you've noted, however, the rail guide would not be immune from that marking because it is in direct contact with the saw guide.
squall_line said:I mean, lefties just look at the world differently. It's rare that a workflow is actually better suited for a lefty than a righty as it is in this case.
Packard said:So, if Festool pays for “hard anodizing” it is possible that it will keep looking new for quite a while. I do recall that extended anodizing times can result in dimensional changes, but I don’t remember where I heard that and it may not be accurate.