friedchicken
Member
- Joined
- May 6, 2022
- Messages
- 25
Re: Metric.
It's both. I do all my woodworking in Imperial, and all my woodwork tooling is Imperial. I don't like the metric system for woodworking at all, and I should emphasize: I am a scientist intimately familiar with the metric system. The base 12 of the foot means it can be cleanly divided by 2, 3, 4, and 6. Base 10 can be divided by 2 and 5, both prime numbers.
Additionally, the units themselves are not arbitrary. An inch is approximately the distance of the center bone of my index finger, a foot is... about the length of a foot. These are useful units, at least for woodworking. It's kind of perfect actually.
Finally, it's a standard. Boards are 4' x 8'. Studs are 32" apart. Piping is 1/2" or 3/4" NPT. To muddy those waters would be flat-out stupid on my part. Someone mentioned American patriotism... I'm not sure what to say to that. That's entirely a falsehood, but to force metric where everything is standard.... That's unfiltered european arrogance.
Additionally, it's the same thing with replacement blades, replacement bits, replacement whatever. 1/4" hex shank, 7 1/4" circular saw blade, vacuums take filters btw. There's another benefit: sticking with standards allows leveraging and taking advantage of new tech that emerges that will follow said standards... i.e. maybe a new type of bit made of depleted uranium or something. Value comes in versatility, and this is decidedly not festool's strong point (See the DTS and RTS that used to be the same sander, but festool decided people could buy two instead... Bosch gives you three).
And yes, sometimes you need to spontaneously run to home depot or ace or wherever b/c you don't have the tool you need, even if you try to stock up on everything you might need (which I decidedly do!). Worst case you have to go and buy a brand new tool, at which point that value proposition just flew out the window.
I've been eyeing the TPC18. You really like it that much? It looks very similar to the Fein ASCM18-4 QMP. I think it might even be made by Fein? Festool would probably have better support/availability here. Someone near me is selling the TPC18 + TID18 kit for a reasonable price.
We'll see, I only have limited use for a drill and my brushed Bosch has done all I need it to and done it well.
That's a really interesting point about the OF1010R: smaller requires more engineering. I wholeheartedly agree. I still run the OG iPhone SE: I think it's a way more impressive phone than any of the gargantuan monsters apple makes now. It gets more attention from people who care, that's for sure
Thing is I use both 1/4" and 1/2" bits, and if it were up to me, I'd use exclusively 1/2" shank bits. I need the 1/2" shank. The 1400 will seemingly handle all my routing needs. I'm not sure about the ergonomics of it; I really like my D-Handle porter cable.
It sounds like I'm railing on festool pretty hard here, and I am. The only reason I'm seriously considering them is because they're seemingly the only company making and selling properly built tools (and accompanying accessories!). Everything else feels like a race to the bottom or is such a new player to the game they get an A for effort, but C for execution. This whole thing started when I got my DTS sander, held the thing, realized the support network behind it, saw the storage container it came in, noticed the details, and understood that Thank God somebody somewhere is able to do things right.
It's both. I do all my woodworking in Imperial, and all my woodwork tooling is Imperial. I don't like the metric system for woodworking at all, and I should emphasize: I am a scientist intimately familiar with the metric system. The base 12 of the foot means it can be cleanly divided by 2, 3, 4, and 6. Base 10 can be divided by 2 and 5, both prime numbers.
Additionally, the units themselves are not arbitrary. An inch is approximately the distance of the center bone of my index finger, a foot is... about the length of a foot. These are useful units, at least for woodworking. It's kind of perfect actually.
Finally, it's a standard. Boards are 4' x 8'. Studs are 32" apart. Piping is 1/2" or 3/4" NPT. To muddy those waters would be flat-out stupid on my part. Someone mentioned American patriotism... I'm not sure what to say to that. That's entirely a falsehood, but to force metric where everything is standard.... That's unfiltered european arrogance.
Additionally, it's the same thing with replacement blades, replacement bits, replacement whatever. 1/4" hex shank, 7 1/4" circular saw blade, vacuums take filters btw. There's another benefit: sticking with standards allows leveraging and taking advantage of new tech that emerges that will follow said standards... i.e. maybe a new type of bit made of depleted uranium or something. Value comes in versatility, and this is decidedly not festool's strong point (See the DTS and RTS that used to be the same sander, but festool decided people could buy two instead... Bosch gives you three).
And yes, sometimes you need to spontaneously run to home depot or ace or wherever b/c you don't have the tool you need, even if you try to stock up on everything you might need (which I decidedly do!). Worst case you have to go and buy a brand new tool, at which point that value proposition just flew out the window.
mino said:TPC18 -- get it the sooner the better. The most value you get out of that tool is the less drills you already have - as it will take care of most of that scope for a hobby user.
For a complete scope on drills, a hobby user can get along with:
CXS 12 (non-set)
TPC 18 + all the special chucks (work also on the CXS) as the daily driver, use the impact only for light touch, for rest see below
A monster Makita/Dewalt/MW 120+ Nm drill for the truly heavy-duty work.
Later, wanting more drills (and chucks) on hand, add a T18+3 (basic) or a used T18 Easy to the above as the go-to drill.
As other have said, there is nothing special about the HK55, even the HKC 55 is not special (unless coupled with the FSK for a Pro) compared to a cheaper Makita/Dewalt/etc. professional 6" saw.
The HK 85 is a different discussion, but there is no 110V version around for the US friends.
As for routers, as a hobby user, I would respectfully steer you towards the OF 1010 R and augmenting it with a cheaper "high power" one or keeping one you already have for 1/2" work.
The biggest value in the Festool routers is precision and that is personified in the OF 1010 with its ability to center the templates with a mandrel. A feature the OF 1400 does not have.
I've been eyeing the TPC18. You really like it that much? It looks very similar to the Fein ASCM18-4 QMP. I think it might even be made by Fein? Festool would probably have better support/availability here. Someone near me is selling the TPC18 + TID18 kit for a reasonable price.
We'll see, I only have limited use for a drill and my brushed Bosch has done all I need it to and done it well.
That's a really interesting point about the OF1010R: smaller requires more engineering. I wholeheartedly agree. I still run the OG iPhone SE: I think it's a way more impressive phone than any of the gargantuan monsters apple makes now. It gets more attention from people who care, that's for sure

Thing is I use both 1/4" and 1/2" bits, and if it were up to me, I'd use exclusively 1/2" shank bits. I need the 1/2" shank. The 1400 will seemingly handle all my routing needs. I'm not sure about the ergonomics of it; I really like my D-Handle porter cable.
It sounds like I'm railing on festool pretty hard here, and I am. The only reason I'm seriously considering them is because they're seemingly the only company making and selling properly built tools (and accompanying accessories!). Everything else feels like a race to the bottom or is such a new player to the game they get an A for effort, but C for execution. This whole thing started when I got my DTS sander, held the thing, realized the support network behind it, saw the storage container it came in, noticed the details, and understood that Thank God somebody somewhere is able to do things right.