Cheese said:So...the confusion continues. Where's [member=57769]TylerC[/member] ?
TylerC said:Cheese said:So...the confusion continues. Where's [member=57769]TylerC[/member] ?
The ETS EC 150 will not accept the 125 mm pad. The sanders have different shafts. The 150 sanders have a keyed shaft with wings, whereas the 125 has flats but not wings. I can send pics if needed. The soft pad for the 150 sanders is thinner than the 125 mm pad and therefore does not engage the pad brake. Also, the balance between the 5 mm stroke 150 and the 3 mm stroke 150 are not the same.
bobfog said:So is what you're effectively saying, that the 125mm pads absolutely won't fit the 150mm ETS EC? However, the 150mm pad will physically fit the 125mm machine and spin, but the pad brake won't engage and the performance will be sub-optimal due to balance issues?
bobfog said:Ok, so I went to my local Festool dealer today and looked at the situation for myself.
Observations:
1) The pad for the 150 does indeed fit the 125.
2) The pad brake works perfectly, whilst the pads are "keyed differently" (looks like a purposely engineered flaw/point of difference IMO to stop people putting the 125 pad on the 150) the 150 pad sits on the 125 just fine. Though as previously stated the addition keying prevents it working the other way (125>150)
3) The pad felt absolutely perfectly balanced both when spinning freely in the air and when on the work doing its thing.
Cheese said:After reading all the reply's and conjecture, I just decided to purchase an ETS EC 150 pad and fit it to my ETS EC 125. Sure enough, as [member=60286]bobfog[/member] stated, the pad does fit and performs the very same as the stock 125 pad.
Balance with the 150 pad is not an issue and that makes sense because the pad is injection molded, which means it was designed for symmetry from the get go.
The pad brake works fine and has nothing to do with the pad itself. In the photo below, the brake assembly is behind the magnesium housing and does not interact with the pad at any time.
The pad brake stops both of the pads in the same amount of time, switching back & forth between pads, I was unable to tell any difference.
Cheese said:[member=60286]bobfog[/member]
Funny that you asked, I'm gutting this bathroom and today it was all about ripping out the old ply underlayment. I was going to sand down the subfloor with the Rotex 125 but then my eye caught the ES 125 with the 150 pad on it. So I slapped some 80 grit on it and I was amazed how fast the job went. That larger surface makes such a big difference as far as time spent. This sander is brilliant, it almost makes me want to try a ES 150/5. No problems...no issues, it works great.
I just wish this interchange thing would work on the 150 sanders, instead of just the 125. It'd be so slick to purchase a 150/3 & a 150/5 and then a couple of 125 pads.
Cheese said:After reading all the reply's and conjecture, I just decided to purchase an ETS EC 150 pad and fit it to my ETS EC 125…
plgard said:Cheese said:After reading all the reply's and conjecture, I just decided to purchase an ETS EC 150 pad and fit it to my ETS EC 125…
Sorry if this has been asked and answered,
Can anyone tell me why the sander in Cheese's third image has a metal plate stamped "150/3" and a product sticker under the handle assembly that says "125/3"?
plgard said:anyone have any hands-on experience changing between the 125 & 150 pad on the North American version of the Deros?
Like others here, I'm on the fence between the ETS EC and the Deros. I didn't even realize the Ceros had been recalled and perhaps superseded by the Deros.
When I decided a current project had enough sanding to warrant replacing my (old) top-heavy ETS 150, I thought I'd consider the Ceros because aside from being more like the old pneumatic DA's, I had remembered reading or seeing a video (YouTube) where the 5" & 6" pads were interchangeable.
When I went looking for the Ceros at (the usual) online retailers and found only the Deros I assumed it too would accommodate either size pad.
I guess the whole pad swap thing isn't THAT important, but it doesn't seem like it should be that difficult either...