Coen said:
Festool's parent company got fined because their fixed pricing supposedly violated some EU rule and ever since it's a free for all. Result is less dealers with any knowledge and more box-movers with zero product knowledge.
With more expensive materials like aluminum, adding holes is often free. Punching holes costs money yes, but the material they cut out is recycled (+$!). Perhaps in the case of LR 32 pattern not completely, but in case of larger holes with less tolerances it's often completely free in total production costs to add holes. In lots of designs you actually want holes, rebates and cut-outs to save weight.
The plain is just there to keep set prices down I guess. My guess is that the profit margin in Europe on the LR 32 rail is higher too.
In this case it adds a manufacturing step - the "plain" rails are not put on a CNC while the LR22 (and the KP series) need to be. The material recovery is probably minimal given how small the holes are.
Ref the pricing, yeah, CRG probably does not mind as he is a commercial shop fella where dealers will come to them. But right now it is impossible to get almost any Festool stock in person - unless you live in a very big urban area or a business where the dealer will come to you.
My city is like 500k, 1 mil with the area in question, and there is like 1 (one!) dealer with any Festool stock on display here. And even that is just historical as they did lots of business with Narex/Protool in the past.
I spoke with the folks lately and they do not move almost any tools to retail customers. Most sales are immediate consumables and some accessories. The sales moved to etail or commercial where custom deals are made. They only have a display because they use it as a presentation area for business customers. Once they give up, my "nearest" shop will be a big etailer where a fan employee made displays for business customers ... in the middle of nowhere some 100 miles way. Yupi!
Does not affect ME much, but it DOES hurt Festool a lot in the hobby market.
In the past it was one of their main differentiators while now their retail presence is pretty much non-existent. Makita, Millwaukeee and the others still maintain
de-facto price caps but they do it dirty so manage to fly under the radar while Festool got screwed by the (in my view legally wrong) ruling.
Act straight, the gov will screw you. Act a crook and the government will rid you of any straight competition..