RVHernandez
Member
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2011
- Messages
- 21
Paul G said:Most of the angst over this move would be mitigated with dual scales or continuing to also offer the metric counterparts.
That's exactly right.
Paul G said:Most of the angst over this move would be mitigated with dual scales or continuing to also offer the metric counterparts.
Paul G said:Most of the angst over this move would be mitigated with dual scales or continuing to also offer the metric counterparts.
bobfog said:Paul G said:While I'm glad to be able to get some imperial tools, eliminating their metric counterparts is a big mistake. I'm all for folks having a choice which system they want to use.
Exactly! Especially as they are already made in metric as it stands. This is possibly one of the most stupid and most ignorant thing I have seen Festool do for a while! Feel sorry for those in NA who are denied the choice. Not an imperial vs metric debate, but criticism of Festool forcing a change when it would be so easy to offer imperial as an alternative, not an imposed decision and keep the current metric line-up!
Euclid said:Ia vote for a switch from degrees to radians. Pi/4 [smile]
What about calibrating in Shaku and Sun for those of us with a passion for Japanese joinery?
Paul G said:Most of the angst over this move would be mitigated with dual scales or continuing to also offer the metric counterparts.
Cheese said:I'd say ALL [thumbs up]...because it's all about having a choice and this is the most discombobulated decision I've seen from a mature, sophisticated, supposedly intelligent engineering/manufacturing facility ever.
I worked in the semiconductor manufacturing arena for over 30 years and that industry is by far the most knee-jerk, reactionary group of people, because if you crash only 25 wafers in the manufacturing process, that's worth $1+ million dollars and it can/will cost you your job. Yet as whacky as the semiconductor industry could be, they did think through the process thoroughly.
I guarantee this decision has not been thought through to that same level of awareness. It's strictly a marketing driven promise that if you change to imperial scales there will be a XXXX% increase in sales. Yawn...there's a $600-$700 price differential between You and Them...did you factor that in to your rush to sales picture?
This mistaken marketing position will become obvious when the person that buys the imperial tool, because that's what he/she wants, looks at the imperial scales and salivates because that's what they've always wanted and then attempts to adjust their new imperial tool in metric increments...whoops, that's not what I wanted.
Tragic...opportunity lost.
Cheese said:Paul G said:Most of the angst over this move would be mitigated with dual scales or continuing to also offer the metric counterparts.
Most...you really think so?
I'd say ALL [thumbs up]...because it's all about having a choice and this is the most discombobulated decision I've seen from a mature, sophisticated, supposedly intelligent engineering/manufacturing facility ever.
I worked in the semiconductor manufacturing arena for over 30 years and that industry is by far the most knee-jerk, reactionary group of people, because if you crash only 25 wafers in the manufacturing process, that's worth $1+ million dollars and it can/will cost you your job. Yet as whacky as the semiconductor industry could be, they did think through the process thoroughly.
I guarantee this decision has not been thought through to that same level of awareness. It's strictly a marketing driven promise that if you change to imperial scales there will be a XXXX% increase in sales. Yawn...there's a $600-$700 price differential between You and Them...did you factor that in to your rush to sales picture?
This mistaken marketing position will become obvious when the person that buys the imperial tool, because that's what he/she wants, looks at the imperial scales and salivates because that's what they've always wanted and then attempts to adjust their new imperial tool in metric increments...whoops, that's not what I wanted.
Tragic...opportunity lost.
erock said:Not sure if I'm over reacting to this whole mm/imperial scale thing......
But, I ordered a Bosch router instead of the OF1010. I just hope the dust collection with the Bosch is decent. And for giggles I ordered a Bosch 5" RO sander.
I received a Bosch catalog in the mail and they've got some nice tools ! [scratch chin]
Eric
Paul G said:...and not some mutant tweener value that doesn't match the imperial scale.
it's no different than the speedometer in my vehicle dashboard. I don't at all think in km/h but I am sure glad that dual scale is on my speedo when I visit Canada.
Drich said:I just had a idea how to stick it to festool. When these hit the stores everybody go out and buy one then return it with in the 30 day period and state the reason if for the lack of a metric scale and flood them with returns. That should get their attention. What else can one do? The only way they will listen is if it cost them cash.
Construct said:Drich said:I just had a idea how to stick it to festool. When these hit the stores everybody go out and buy one then return it with in the 30 day period and state the reason if for the lack of a metric scale and flood them with returns. That should get their attention. What else can one do? The only way they will listen is if it cost them cash.
Please don't do this. It won't have the effect you desire, and it's a huge waste of time and resources for people throughout the supply chain. It's also unrealistic to expect that more than a handful of people would actually do this.
If you're upset, send feedback directly to Festool. Don't abuse their generous return policies with a vague hope that your complaint will somehow carry more weight.
No one is complaining about festool serving imperial users. They are complaining that festool will no longer serve metric users even though the tools are still metric and festool still produces metric tools.Holmz said:Construct said:Drich said:I just had a idea how to stick it to festool. When these hit the stores everybody go out and buy one then return it with in the 30 day period and state the reason if for the lack of a metric scale and flood them with returns. That should get their attention. What else can one do? The only way they will listen is if it cost them cash.
Please don't do this. It won't have the effect you desire, and it's a huge waste of time and resources for people throughout the supply chain. It's also unrealistic to expect that more than a handful of people would actually do this.
If you're upset, send feedback directly to Festool. Don't abuse their generous return policies with a vague hope that your complaint will somehow carry more weight.
Simpler is buying an MT55... [big grin]
Or if one somehow likes the FT tracks [blink], then a Makita.
Alternatively it doesn't make a lot of difference to people understanding metric to convert to inches, or to just use a stick-on metric label.
It is hard to justify complaining that FT are not as common and also complain that they want to serve imperial(ist) users.