AstroKeith said:The quality and precision (apart from the jigsaw!) are very addictive.
Crazyraceguy said:[member=44099]Cheese[/member] What would be any different about the cordless Festool Carvex over the corded one?
rst said:As far as Fesddition goes, resistance is futile. I use my Carvexs(corded in shop, battery in van-on-site) for fairly precise work, mostly on plastics. It is fussier to set blades but works great for me. It is certainly an upgrade from my first jigsaw, a metal body B&D, then an ancient Bosch 1582. I still have the Bosch and all the available accessories, including the inverted table. I’ve even cut glass with the at carbide blades and water bottle attachment.
Cheese said:Crazyraceguy said:[member=44099]Cheese[/member] What would be any different about the cordless Festool Carvex over the corded one?
Battery convenience...that's it. And I hate the carbide blade guides on both the Trion & Carvex. Although I'd purchase a battery powered Trion in a second if Festool offered one. [big grin]
Crazyraceguy said:Oh ok, that makes sense. It's not that you would choose the battery powered Carvex over the corded Carvex (which is how I took it)
I like the carbide blade guides over the simple rollers that most others have. The adjustment is a bit of an annoyance, if you regularly change blades. As long as you are just replacing like for like it doesn't come into play. There is some wear to the blade shank that doesn't happen to the roller types, but I have also seen the rollers lock-up and fail.
Crazyraceguy said:If I had a "do over" I would have gotten another Bosch, like I had before. The blower clears the cut line far better, in far more situations. The Carvex really relies on the extractor, so without it, the Bosch is far better.