Jesse Cloud
Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2007
- Messages
- 1,746
I have both the Rotex and the 150/3. They are both great sanders and I wouldn't part with either one, but I find myself reaching for the 150/3 most of the time.
Tom Bellemare said:I thought my new coffee machine was cool.
It's just not Festool cool. What kind of machine did you get?
Chappy said:Well, I done went and did it.... came home today with TS 55, MFT/3, OF1400, CT36,Domino set, Rotex 150, paper, 106" rail, clamps, etc..... and the wife says it all has to go under the tree. [doh]
That is a great list I would only change a few things, get the ct26 instead. GET a rotax a festool sander is a tool you will put on your nightstand before you go to sleep at night. If I could start over I would have got the ts55 instead of the planer.also the domino is a dream I use it on EVERY project get the full set and extra dominos. Hoped this helpedChappy said:Greetings all, been lurking here for a while now but only recently registered. I have a decision to make... SWMBO has decided that I can add some occupied systainers to my "pile of stuff". Now, the men in my family all seem to get bitten by the woodworking/remodeling bug in their late 30's or so and while I used to snicker and scoff about this I have been symptomatic for about four years now.
Chappy said:Well, I done went and did it.... came home today with TS 55, MFT/3, OF1400, CT36,Domino set, Rotex 150, paper, 106" rail, clamps, etc..... and the wife says it all has to go under the tree. [doh]
davidwilkie said:If you are looking for more complete outfit of your shop, I agree with many of the posters above that you will need some tools that either Festool does not make or which are simply too easily satisfied at a much better cost-to-performance ratio.
I would echo above on getting the 106" guide rail for breaking down plywood sheets. But I would also add the Parallel Guide. I just broke down six sheets for some new cabinets I am making and the speed and accuracy when making repeated cuts is amazing. My pieces are nearly identical. No need to take them to the table saw (which I do own -- Grizzly 3hp cabinet saw has served me quite well and it's reasonable cost -- and yes you probably need one).
The Domino is terrific. But a lot of money on more of a speciality tool. Depending on what you're making, you might make good use of a biscuit jointer. I have the DeWalt and it works well. If you are planning to make a lot of tenon joinery furniture (stressing "furniture"...not remodeling projects, etc.) then maybe you can justify the Domino.
I have the Makita compound mitre saw (LS13 model or something like that) and love it. It is very accurate. If I were to only buy only one plug in power tool, it would be a compound mitre saw. The ability to make a quick and accurate end cut with about 2 seconds of setup time is simply too wonderful with a CMS. I'm sure Kapex owners would state how much better Festool's is, but I can not think of one way the Makita could be better and it is far less.
You need to assess what your wood source will be: S4 (finished on all 4 sides) or raw lumber? If raw, a joiner and a planer are a must. I have a 6" Grizzly that works great so long as the lumber is not so long. And my DeWalt planer is simply amazing. Practically do not need to sand afterwards it cuts so smooth. Seriously. These tools will dent your budget, but the choices I made were relatively inexpensive compared to what you can spend on those tools and I have been very satisfied with both.
I am sure you will get some advice to go high end for every tool, that they will last a lifetime, etc. But I think you can find some relatively high performance-to-cost solutions for some of the things you need and mix in the Festool were the ergonomics or vastly superior performance is warranted. Good luck!