HughWP said:
Not sure what relevance being a new users has to my post but sense some hostility there and a bunch of assumptions about how I have used the equipment. I believe as a consumer who has committed to using festool products, which comes at a premium I have a right to complain when the quality falls below reasonable expectations.
Sorry if it was seen as hostility. None was meant ref. your OP.
New user here means no one knows anything about you here. This includes only a guess what "a couple years old rails" means.
Either case, I reacted mainly to the "yeah, extrusions tend to not be straight" notions which are mostly conjecture and only tend scare folks not too familiar with the matter.
Then I was referring to that the returns policy
cannot assume anything - i.e. a 2 yrs old rail is a 2 years old rail. And, frankly, improper storage is as likely (more actually) of an issue and it would not be covered by warranty. E.g. storing a rail on its edge for a prolonged period is a sure way to damage/bend it. Even in original packaging. Also a damaged/bent rail received due to improper shipping is *very* common too and impossible to notice without using/checking it. The packaging cam be completely intact while the rail can be bent from the whole package hitting the ground, not damaging the cardboard. Can think of it as a glass jar in a box ..
I did infer you are not too familiar with precision items to appreciate how sensitive these things can be to proper storage and handling. Rails are like high precision engineer's straight edges. A highly sensitive thing if accuracy is to be preserved.
For context, there are two ways to safely store a rail (or a precision straight edge):
a) flat, same way it is placed on the stock
b) vertically on its end
Thanks for replies, interesting to learn about potential shortcomings of aluminium extrusions.
And here you see the problem I reacted to - those "shortcomings of aluminium extrusions" mentioned are valid as a general rule, but are mostly irrelevant to the issue at hand. It addresses
potential improper manufacturing which would be a "Festool problem". In practice we know the FS/2 rails, when not damaged, have bends which are about half as big compared to the competition. Yes, I have checked this myself on a 10+ rails sample.
Should a non-straight rail come out, it would have been thrown out by Festool. BTW, that is why US-local manufacturing of rails was abandoned lately. They could not get the quality they get from a supplier in Germany, had too many rejects making it non-economical. True, there
can be a QC miss, but that is pretty rare and you would have /presumably/ caught this when you got the rails ..
To clarify my original post. I bought the rails and then they were safely stored for two years without use, due to working somewhere where I didn't need my own kit. So they don't have years of wear on them.
Festool aren't offering me a three year warranty, only two years and they were bought just over two years ago.
About warranty, the rails are not a "tool" so there is only a "basic" manufacturing defects warranty for them (in EU 2 years, I think 1 year in US).
But even if the rails were 6 months old, them being bent would not really be covered - as mentioned above, it is pretty easy to damage a rail by improper storage even in original packaging. This makes any "warranty" claim relating to straightness a can of worms. I personally do not know *any* maker of precision items that would accept such a warranty claim after several months. And I am talking of items that go $1000 for a straight edge, not low cost stuff.
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As for the practical terms, you mention to have two rails, are they bent both the same way possibly? If so, that would clearly point to a storage issue.
Either way it would be best if you can take them to either a Festool dealer or some place where there is a reference straight edge available - to check/mark which parts of the rail are affected and which are good.
And last point - I am presuming you are aware so just to be sure:
Be careful with cutting when placing the rail. Especially with the longer rails the anti-skid strips Festool uses are
very strong. If you have a longer rail (2000 mm is enough for this) that is placed on the stock and when putting the rail on the mark raise/move only one side of the rail - without slightly lifting the middle - you can actually bend the rail laterally enough to get a 0.02" off in the middle. The anti-slip strips are just so strong they can allow you to bend the rail laterally even just placed on the stock. The rail is not damaged, it just acts like a spring, but the cut is ruined. To avoid this a longer rail or rail assembly must be lifted slightly and then placed on the mark, not pushed sideways just from one side like one would do with shorter cuts.