DynaGlide said:
DeformedTree said:
good luck cheese. I saw afterwards it looked like a metric OF2200 had been there. That was one I was going to buy. I think I missed a chance at 2 different metric routers and a metric planer.
This may be an unpopular opinion but I don't see how the scale on a router matters. If you're routing to drop something specific in I take that something and drop it between the depth stop rod and the stops. Or any number of setup blocks I have in the shop. I have lots of dominos in different thicknesses for that.
Like all the tools, you might never use the markings on the tool, that's not the point really. The point is they shouldn't have inches on them. The tools are metric in design, folks work in metric, there is no reason for the inch markings. Folks very well do use them too, and just want mm on the tools. A lot of it is principle of it all. If the tools had no markings on them, then things wouldn't matter. But if they have markings, they need to be correct.
It's the same reason that I'm not going to buy an inch labeled tool and trying modifying it. That's just dumb, and it's still "inch" far as the part number of the tool matters. Every time someone buys an inch based tool, even though they want metric, it's just sending Festool the message that the person wanted an inch based tool.
I can't think of any instance of a company having a product and selling it someplace, then deciding not to sell it anymore, while still making it elsewhere, and even selling an almost identical product. Only some sort of legislative ban on something can cause that. They could have just kept selling the metric versions along with the inch versions, let folks decide what they want. It would have avoided the whole mess, plus would have let them really see the market. They sell the parallel guides in both inch and metric, do the same on the other parts. People bought their tools in metric for years, now they are left high and dry without options....well Mafell. Now folks have to hunt used tools just to support doing something that would be a non issue anyplace else. Any other company would just sell both versions. Festool has all the parts, the tools are are certified for the US market, etc. It's just part swaps. They are leaving money on the table and causing folks to look elsewhere for tools. Some folks don't care about this, fine. But the important part is understanding this matters a lot to other folks.