SMLWinds said:
Thanks for the advice! So I know the saw is not sold in the US, but is there a way you can buy it abroad and have it shipped to the US? Is it legal to have a freeing in Europe buy it and then ship it to me? Would the motor/electrical be compatible here in the US?
Legal wise, sure. People buy stuff and send it. The issue with Festool stuff is that soon as you get to stuff with motors, it becomes hard to get the tools in from retailers. Festool doesn't allow companies to sell out of their regions. Some folks report non-motorized stuff they have been able to buy from Europe Amazon sites, I haven't had success. If you had a retailer that shipped it, then that is the easiest thing. Obviously there is no warranty coverage once you go down this road. Procurement wise, the easiest way is to know someone over there who just buys it and sends it to you.
Far as will they run. Yes. I have 230V tools from Europe, they are fine. This doesn't mean every tool will work perfect every time, if you have something that has some odd hang up, then there might be a chance it doesn't work. Many though will have right on them something like 208-250VAC 50/60hz. My 230V CT26 is the German model, it says 50/60hz right on it yet is not sold in a 60hz country.
I use a plug adapter Schuko to NEMA 6-15, but you can cut the cord and wire a 6-15 plug to the tools. Voltage is voltage, the only difference is they reference ground to one of the phases, vs a centertap like the US, but it's the voltage across the wires that matters. If you want a 120V version, then you basically have to get a UK jobsite model. Again, voltage is voltage. You again either need an adapter, or I think (others can confirm), the tools use the same plug-it, so you just use a N.A. cord. All of this is "do at your own risk, no one here is responsible", but many here have tools from Europe.
One concern could be the tool runs faster on 60hz, for most tools, no one would care, but with this being a chainsaw, this might be a tool where there could be some concern.
I think most of us feel the same on the mafell stuff. It's nice and we have no issue paying good money for tools, but there is a point where it just doesn't make any sense. I think a lot of folks would buy their tools and start doing timber framing and so forth with them if they just were not priced as they are. The normal track saws, ddf40, etc are normal-ish, but the pure timber frame stuff, just.....