Crazyraceguy
Member
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2015
- Messages
- 4,961
[member=8955]Coen[/member], I think he was deliberately lifting the saw because it wouldn't do it on its own?
Crazyraceguy said:[member=8955]Coen[/member], I think he was deliberately lifting the saw because it wouldn't do it on its own?
mino said:So you effectively agree with Coen that a missing riving knife is a downgrade - which you are used to compensate for. [wink]woodbutcherbower said:... FWIW - I’m old-school, and I’ve ALWAYS inserted wedges behind the blade whenever I suspect any chance of a cut closure. When I’ve occasionally encountered something closing up a heck of a lot - you can feel it because it’s also closing up on the riving knife, too. The second the saw starts to need any effort to push it - in goes a wedge.
mino said:Those who appreciate it - and are able to notice it - are probably too few for Festool to matter. Such is life. Besides, makes TS 55 Rs that little bit cheaper.
[smile]
Crazyraceguy said:Mark Katz said:Well the TS saws are not scoring saws - maybe you meant sheet goods saws. But it is obvious that, while they're great for sheet goods, they're useful for other materials too. If they were only intended for sheet goods, why wood there be a TS 75 and a TS 60? A TS 55 would be adequate for any sheet good. For that matter, so would a TS35 or TS45.xedos said:Most likely because it's not necessary.
The materials typically cut with a scoring saw don't tend to close up on themselves.
It's not an oversight - FT is very deliberate with their decisions - for better or worse.
He may be confused, thinking that all of the TS60 are the TSV version?
Yep. Every time Festool comes with the new shiny, there are a bunch of "upgraders" which stuff the used market, dropping the prices a bit.Coen said:Huh, what becomes cheaper? The TS 55 R on the used market because of more sellers since there *something new*?
xedos said:Thought they'd learned their lesson with the demise of the ATF 65 which had dismal sales.
I'll bet this one does too, except in that "V" variant.
And yes, losing a useful feature (the riving knife) for some gimmick that fixes only a part that the lost feature did (ok, in this case also some that the previous didn't) annoys the heck out of me. Same applies to the **** heights of the new Systainers.
Agree, it's terrible. Have replaced the ports on my domino and tsc55 with 3D printed replacements, which accept the fittings without the struggle.Cheese said:I can deal with no riving knife but the Cleantec bayonet fitting is a different issue altogether. [eek] [dead horse]