My first post here and unfortunately not a positive one
I am a huge fan of Festool and own several Festool tools. I have to say though that the Festool missed the mark on the ETS 125. I have read a bunch of threads here about this sander and I know I am not alone on my disappointment. I am a huge fan of German tools and machines and am willing to spend more for the quality. But, my worn out PC 5" ROS still outperforms the ETS 125. The problem is the pad does not really rotate. This sander is basically a "vibrating" sander. I think I bought one of those from Sears 25 years ago? I took my sander back to a Festool Service center in Honolulu (Woodcraft) and the tech. said there is nothing wrong with it and showed me a new one that does the same thing... or I should say does NOT do the same thing which is rotate. The pad rotates by vibration only. If you barely hold the pad, it stops rotating. Of course, if you place the sander on a surface, it stops rotating.
What ROS doesn't rotate? What quality tool needs to be hung from a rope and run for 10 hours to be broken in (as I have read here)? And I don't buy the..."let the sander do the sanding thing by not putting pressure on it" And another myth I have read here is... "you need to use the right sander for the right job". I have used my PC 5"ROS for sanding from 80 to 800 grit sandpaper and all the way up to 4000 grit Abralon pads for polishing lacquered finishes. If an old 5" PC sander can do all that, shouldn't a Festool 5" sander?
I love Festool, just not a big fan of the ES 125.

I am a huge fan of Festool and own several Festool tools. I have to say though that the Festool missed the mark on the ETS 125. I have read a bunch of threads here about this sander and I know I am not alone on my disappointment. I am a huge fan of German tools and machines and am willing to spend more for the quality. But, my worn out PC 5" ROS still outperforms the ETS 125. The problem is the pad does not really rotate. This sander is basically a "vibrating" sander. I think I bought one of those from Sears 25 years ago? I took my sander back to a Festool Service center in Honolulu (Woodcraft) and the tech. said there is nothing wrong with it and showed me a new one that does the same thing... or I should say does NOT do the same thing which is rotate. The pad rotates by vibration only. If you barely hold the pad, it stops rotating. Of course, if you place the sander on a surface, it stops rotating.
What ROS doesn't rotate? What quality tool needs to be hung from a rope and run for 10 hours to be broken in (as I have read here)? And I don't buy the..."let the sander do the sanding thing by not putting pressure on it" And another myth I have read here is... "you need to use the right sander for the right job". I have used my PC 5"ROS for sanding from 80 to 800 grit sandpaper and all the way up to 4000 grit Abralon pads for polishing lacquered finishes. If an old 5" PC sander can do all that, shouldn't a Festool 5" sander?
I love Festool, just not a big fan of the ES 125.