Spent yesterday morning making some panels for the sides of a kitchen island I am building. Basically beauty panels with rails and stiles to make plywood cases look like frame and panel so lots of pieces to be cut, sanded, glued and screwed 
So I pulled the RO150 with 80 grit using gear driven mode made quick work of planer marks and some burns (Maple burns way to easily). Once everything went though the 80 grit beast, I walked up the grits to 150 with the ETS. Having both the sanders available made it easy to alternate if I came across a section that had some planer marks I missed the first time through, I could swap back to the RO and hit it another pass or two.
The RO really wants to run the show. It's definitely a two hander and will wander all over the place if you let it. It also has more then enough power to throw a 3' piece of 2 1/2"x3/4" maple 10 ft down a driveway, (don't ask how I know [embarassed] ) Dropping down to random orbit mode it's a little more civilized but very loud, buzzy on the hands and off balance. It's not something I'd want to use for an extended period. The ETS was even more of a dream after using the RO for a little bit. Smooth, much quieter, very easy to use for a decent period of time and it is more then willing to go where you want it to without a fight.
So I guess I'm saying the ETS is still my go to for most things, the RO has a place (Planer mark removal mainly). I'm hoping a few more hours of use will start to quiet the RO down some, it really has a sound like the bearings are made of gravel plus a little high pitched whine mixed in that is annoying.
I guess I am a little spoiled by the ETS. The RO is just a totally different animal to work with. I haven't decided if I like it yet but I think it is going to be my go to for first run through to clear saw and planer marks now... it's really good at that.
...And that's my story for the RO and ETS usage for the weekend.
-Jim

So I pulled the RO150 with 80 grit using gear driven mode made quick work of planer marks and some burns (Maple burns way to easily). Once everything went though the 80 grit beast, I walked up the grits to 150 with the ETS. Having both the sanders available made it easy to alternate if I came across a section that had some planer marks I missed the first time through, I could swap back to the RO and hit it another pass or two.
The RO really wants to run the show. It's definitely a two hander and will wander all over the place if you let it. It also has more then enough power to throw a 3' piece of 2 1/2"x3/4" maple 10 ft down a driveway, (don't ask how I know [embarassed] ) Dropping down to random orbit mode it's a little more civilized but very loud, buzzy on the hands and off balance. It's not something I'd want to use for an extended period. The ETS was even more of a dream after using the RO for a little bit. Smooth, much quieter, very easy to use for a decent period of time and it is more then willing to go where you want it to without a fight.
So I guess I'm saying the ETS is still my go to for most things, the RO has a place (Planer mark removal mainly). I'm hoping a few more hours of use will start to quiet the RO down some, it really has a sound like the bearings are made of gravel plus a little high pitched whine mixed in that is annoying.
I guess I am a little spoiled by the ETS. The RO is just a totally different animal to work with. I haven't decided if I like it yet but I think it is going to be my go to for first run through to clear saw and planer marks now... it's really good at that.
...And that's my story for the RO and ETS usage for the weekend.
-Jim