My first post! — I'm new to the forum but have been visiting for a few months and am really impressed with the knowledge and spirit of helpfulness I've seen here.
Strictly a hobbyist. Professionally a designer/architect. Have been wanting to upgrade/expand my old tools and a current interiors project for a friend (aka requiring 'sweat equity') has finally given me an excuse (I mean, opportunity
) and some funds to acquire Festools: TS55, MFT/3, CT, Drill, Router...
I'd appreciate your insights wrt the selection of the Router (OF1010 vs 1400) and CT (26 vs 36) and Guide Rails:
ROUTER —
To be honest I haven't used one much and back in school we had mostly table-type models so I'm pretty excited with this opposite type. Also, a lot of my designs deal with edge details and my attitude is that if I have one, I'll use it more and more. My Festool dealer recommended the 1400 and gave good reasons yet I tend to be suspicious of "middle-of-the-range/line". For the first year I probably will stick with sheet goods up to 1" thick, then maybe branch out to hardwoods later. I'd also like to work with dovetails. So my question to all you more experienced people:
- 1) Although I understand the OF 1400 can work with LR32 and the dovetail jigs, in day-to-day use is its size cumbersome for such work?
- 2) Or conversely, do you find the OF 1010 to be just annoyingly slightly underpowered for day-to-day use?
- 3) How limiting is the bit selection for the OF 1010 (1/4" and 8mm only)? Admittedly I don't have much real grasp of this despite looking at bits, because right now I can't imagine that far into my routing future.
CT VAC —
Seems like a no-brainer to spend add'l $50 for the higher capacity of the CT36. Then I started thinking about the add'l weight, esp. with the bag half-full or 3/4-full. I won't be moving this thing daily from job site to job site yet I don't have a permanent garage; I think it will stay in one (work) room on a weekly basis but an upcoming project will require it to go upstairs-downstairs.
- 1) Is a loaded CT 36 significantly more of a pain to move around? (dealer currently out of stock so can't compare)
- 2) With 3+ systainers on top, is CT26 or CT36 easier to maneuver in real life, or no big difference?
GUIDE RAILS —
With MFT/3 and TS55 I will get the 1080 and 1400 rails. I'd like to have a 3rd rail to start and was recommended another 1400 but am convinced a 1900 is the way to go for cross-cutting. Yet I'd like to get the LR32 kit later this year so I thought one may as well get a 1400/LR32 right now anyway.
- 1) With a TS55 can one rip cut using 1400+1400 rail setup without having to plunge cut at start? I know this is too short for TS75.
- 2) In the similar vein of needing enough extra rail to engage the tool (in addition to length for the cut itself), what is the "usable" cabinet height that can be made/drilled with the 1400 length of the LR32 guide rail?
I realize these questions might seem rather tangential and finicky but I've found these little things do affect my long-term use/enjoyment of tools, and therefore I'm hoping some of you can shed light on these issues.
Thank you in advance for whatever insights you can provide. I'm looking forward to getting started.
Strictly a hobbyist. Professionally a designer/architect. Have been wanting to upgrade/expand my old tools and a current interiors project for a friend (aka requiring 'sweat equity') has finally given me an excuse (I mean, opportunity

I'd appreciate your insights wrt the selection of the Router (OF1010 vs 1400) and CT (26 vs 36) and Guide Rails:
ROUTER —
To be honest I haven't used one much and back in school we had mostly table-type models so I'm pretty excited with this opposite type. Also, a lot of my designs deal with edge details and my attitude is that if I have one, I'll use it more and more. My Festool dealer recommended the 1400 and gave good reasons yet I tend to be suspicious of "middle-of-the-range/line". For the first year I probably will stick with sheet goods up to 1" thick, then maybe branch out to hardwoods later. I'd also like to work with dovetails. So my question to all you more experienced people:
- 1) Although I understand the OF 1400 can work with LR32 and the dovetail jigs, in day-to-day use is its size cumbersome for such work?
- 2) Or conversely, do you find the OF 1010 to be just annoyingly slightly underpowered for day-to-day use?
- 3) How limiting is the bit selection for the OF 1010 (1/4" and 8mm only)? Admittedly I don't have much real grasp of this despite looking at bits, because right now I can't imagine that far into my routing future.
CT VAC —
Seems like a no-brainer to spend add'l $50 for the higher capacity of the CT36. Then I started thinking about the add'l weight, esp. with the bag half-full or 3/4-full. I won't be moving this thing daily from job site to job site yet I don't have a permanent garage; I think it will stay in one (work) room on a weekly basis but an upcoming project will require it to go upstairs-downstairs.
- 1) Is a loaded CT 36 significantly more of a pain to move around? (dealer currently out of stock so can't compare)
- 2) With 3+ systainers on top, is CT26 or CT36 easier to maneuver in real life, or no big difference?
GUIDE RAILS —
With MFT/3 and TS55 I will get the 1080 and 1400 rails. I'd like to have a 3rd rail to start and was recommended another 1400 but am convinced a 1900 is the way to go for cross-cutting. Yet I'd like to get the LR32 kit later this year so I thought one may as well get a 1400/LR32 right now anyway.
- 1) With a TS55 can one rip cut using 1400+1400 rail setup without having to plunge cut at start? I know this is too short for TS75.
- 2) In the similar vein of needing enough extra rail to engage the tool (in addition to length for the cut itself), what is the "usable" cabinet height that can be made/drilled with the 1400 length of the LR32 guide rail?
I realize these questions might seem rather tangential and finicky but I've found these little things do affect my long-term use/enjoyment of tools, and therefore I'm hoping some of you can shed light on these issues.
Thank you in advance for whatever insights you can provide. I'm looking forward to getting started.