Naildrivingman said:My 1 year and 11 month old Kapex burned up today. I'm not going down the rant road as it serves no purpose. I'm merely posting so other FOGgers are aware of yet another failure.
BTW, my saw has always been plugged directly into a 20A or into my CT26 plugged directly into a 20A. I have never used cords or 15A circuits. I have never used a generator or invertor. I have cut no thicker than 2x soft wood material. I have always used a sharp blade. I have done everything as right as I possibly could.
On to Indiana.
I'm with Mick on this one, love the kapex and work it hard too.VW MICK said:Hi
My kapex is the best saw I've owned and I waited a long time to get it
I love it
Mick
Harry1561 said:I'm with Mick on this one, love the kapex and work it hard too.VW MICK said:Hi
My kapex is the best saw I've owned and I waited a long time to get it
I love it
Mick
JimH2 said:Naildrivingman said:My 1 year and 11 month old Kapex burned up today. I'm not going down the rant road as it serves no purpose. I'm merely posting so other FOGgers are aware of yet another failure.
BTW, my saw has always been plugged directly into a 20A or into my CT26 plugged directly into a 20A. I have never used cords or 15A circuits. I have never used a generator or invertor. I have cut no thicker than 2x soft wood material. I have always used a sharp blade. I have done everything as right as I possibly could.
On to Indiana.
20A or 15A circuit would never make a difference nor should material for the cost of this saw. Also, no need to back up your failure with justifications as to why it should not failing, as there is no excuse for any of them failing. Hopefully with your posting and those by many other people with failures will prevent others from buying them and suffering through a failure. It is obvious Festool has no intention on resolving the issue so the only option is to look elsewhere for a mitre saw.
antss said:of course they do :![]()
I write that utilizing my caveman knowledge of electricity. The combined power consumption of my CT 26 and Kapex with both set at full power is listed on FT USA's site as 2800 watts. Divided by 110V, the result is 25.5A. Theoretically a 20A circuit should trip under that load.antss said:I'm not convinced a dedicated power feed will help.
I guess it can't hurt the situation either. [wink]
According to EKAT this covers the complete motor assembly, except the covers and the electronics board.Arthur444 said:Here is the list of things they replaced, leg spring, end shield, brush holder and brushes, field assembly, gear housing.
My guess is that, unless the thing literally exploded the last time you used it (which I guess you would have noticed), they simply replaced it in total to be able to study it in detail as a whole (send it to a lab or back to the mothership, whatever - without keeping you waiting) in their quest to find the root cause of the problem.This saw was really messed up.
Naildrivingman said://
I write that utilizing my caveman knowledge of electricity. The combined amperage of my CT 26 and Kapex with both set at full power is listed on FT USA's site as 2800 watts. Divided by 110V, the result is 25.5A. Theoretically a 20A circuit should trip under that load.
In fairness I can say that I don't remember tripping a 20A circuit when I've plugged both the CT and Kapex into the same circuit, but from what I've found here and elsewhere it appears that one of the faults of the Kapex lies with inadequate power supply.
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Naildrivingman said:I write that utilizing my caveman knowledge of electricity. The combined power consumption of my CT 26 and Kapex with both set at full power is listed on FT USA's site as 2800 watts. Divided by 110V, the result is 25.5A. Theoretically a 20A circuit should trip under that load.antss said:I'm not convinced a dedicated power feed will help.
I guess it can't hurt the situation either. [wink]
In fairness I can say that I don't remember tripping a 20A circuit when I've plugged both the CT and Kapex into the same circuit, but from what I've found here and elsewhere it appears that one of the faults of the Kapex lies with inadequate power supply.
I work with another Kapex owner and he runs his system off two independent power sources with a demand switch. My warrantee clock will expire in about a year. I have to assume that since FT has not commented on a solution, they are simply replacing defective parts with parts from stock that may share the same defect. I have to do everything I can to prevent this from happening again.
Greg M said:Naildrivingman said:I write that utilizing my caveman knowledge of electricity.antss said:I'm not convinced a dedicated power feed will help.
I guess it can't hurt the situation either. [wink]
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The division should be by the volts measured at the outlet, between 120v and 125v, not 110. Plus the short bursts at full amperage won't heat the breaker enough for it to trip.
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Holmz said:Greg M said:Naildrivingman said:I write that utilizing my caveman knowledge of electricity.antss said:I'm not convinced a dedicated power feed will help.
I guess it can't hurt the situation either. [wink]
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The division should be by the volts measured at the outlet, between 120v and 125v, not 110. Plus the short bursts at full amperage won't heat the breaker enough for it to trip.
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I thought is is nominally 120v, with the allowable 110-125.
http://www.spgsamerica.com/information/acceptable-voltage-ranges