Festool 493566 Guide Bushing Adapter for OF-1400

richkline

Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2018
Messages
122
Hi,

I have the Festool 493566 Guide Bushing Adapter for my OF-1400.  After reviewing a number of posts, I still have a question.  I have two different Whiteside guide bushings that are 1 3/16 and fit upside down perfectly.  But pushing the threads through was at first a non-starter.  After just deciding I'm going to REALLY push, I was able to rock them into position.  It then took a dead blow hammer to get them out.  Is this tight tolerance what other people are seeing.  Will the standard Porter Cable be a little looser fit and easier in and out.  I get you need to be tight but the outer collar should handle that part and the threads shouldn't be damaged going through the Festool guide bushing

Am I doing something wrong?

Thanks,
Rich

 
Assuming you are not putting the parts together at a severe angle, something is wrong with the sizes.  I have never had to use force to get guide rings into the OF 1400 guide bushing adapter.
 
Given how precisely Whiteside machines their bushings, I'd be suspect of the stamped Festool adapter.  Can you test the bushing with another adapter at the dealership? 
 
The OF1400 guide bush system is hit or miss.  If yours is a miss it sucks, cause there is no adjustment.
 
It's a miss, I bought a set of the Porter Cable bushings and they fit (with some play).  The Whiteside ones were so tight that I need a hammer to get it out.  Dwayne at Slabstitcher double checked and also figured out that some 220 sand paper on the threads of the Whiteside bushing was a solution because he experienced the same problem.

Thanks,
Rich
 
I just measured mine:

Whiteside inlay bushing 1.1865"/1.1875" OD.

Porter Cable bushing 1.1785"/1.1795" OD.

Festool guide bushing adapter 1.1825"/1.1845" ID.

So, the Whiteside OD is .004" larger than the Festool ID and the Porter Cable OD is .004" smaller than the Festool ID.
 
This community rocks.  [member=44099]Cheese[/member] it was described to me as likely a function of metric to imperial rounding or conversion.
 
Rich Kline said:
This community rocks.  [member=44099]Cheese[/member] it was described to me as likely a function of metric to imperial rounding or conversion.

Ya Rich that could be, however if you pull up the specs for a 1 3/16-20 UN thread, the max major diameter for a class 3A thread is 1.1875", while the max major diameter for a class 2A thread is 1.1861".

The bore on the Festool adapter varies between 1.1845" to 1.1825", so that even a class 2A thread at the max major diameter would be too large.  [eek]

I think Festool probably just grabbed some Porter Cable bushings and designed their adapter around them figuring they were probably the most universally used bushing on the market.
However, Whiteside being a machine shop first and focused on precision, decided to use the specs of a class 3A thread for a nice tight fit.
 
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