ChuckS said:The locking levers on my DF500 have worked perfectly well since day 1, and I've never experienced the so-called fence drift (some say the drift happened only to the early version). So in this case with no benefits expected in the switch for me, I go by "if it aint broke, don't fix it." [tongue]
Rubbing against the metal frame is bad, but it isn't the case for my DF500. May be you can adjust the screw to keep it from hitting anything? The other two DF500s I've used never have that kind of problem.Cheese said:Snip. but I have experienced the "the knob is tight but it is rubbing against the metal frame so that may be an issue" problem. For my DF 500 it's right on the edge but it's never gone over, however this hack would address that uneasiness felt from time to time.
Snip.
promark747 said:I bought the McMaster knobs but ran into an issue when I tried to install. The one that locks the fence angle was fine. However, I discovered my factory DF500 levers are different than Sedge’s. With his, once you take the little screw out, the plastic handle piece slides off of a separate bolt, which itself can then be screwed out. With mine, the lever and bolt are one piece (glued), and can’t be pulled or screwed out. I can’t figure out a way to remove the handle without destroying it, since when I turn counterclockwise it hits a stop on the aluminum piece that contacts the fence. I’m not sure if my unit is older or newer than Sedge’s, but the levers are definitely different.
It’s bugging me that I can’t figure out how Festool installed this lever. The only way I can see is gluing the lever to the bolt on the very last step, but I can’t imagine they did that since there would be no way to service it. I’m curious if anyone else who has my style of handle has figured out how to remove.
promark747 said:I bought the McMaster knobs but ran into an issue when I tried to install. The one that locks the fence angle was fine. However, I discovered my factory DF500 levers are different than Sedge’s. With his, once you take the little screw out, the plastic handle piece slides off of a separate bolt, which itself can then be screwed out. With mine, the lever and bolt are one piece (glued), and can’t be pulled or screwed out. I can’t figure out a way to remove the handle without destroying it, since when I turn counterclockwise it hits a stop on the aluminum piece that contacts the fence. I’m not sure if my unit is older or newer than Sedge’s, but the levers are definitely different.
It’s bugging me that I can’t figure out how Festool installed this lever. The only way I can see is gluing the lever to the bolt on the very last step, but I can’t imagine they did that since there would be no way to service it. I’m curious if anyone else who has my style of handle has figured out how to remove.
promark747 said:The one that locks the fence angle was fine. However, I discovered my factory DF500 levers are different than Sedge’s. With his, once you take the little screw out, the plastic handle piece slides off of a separate bolt, which itself can then be screwed out. With mine, the lever and bolt are one piece (glued), and can’t be pulled or screwed out. I can’t figure out a way to remove the handle without destroying it, since when I turn counterclockwise it hits a stop on the aluminum piece that contacts the fence. I’m not sure if my unit is older or newer than Sedge’s, but the levers are definitely different.
It’s bugging me that I can’t figure out how Festool installed this lever. The only way I can see is gluing the lever to the bolt on the very last step, but I can’t imagine they did that since there would be no way to service it. I’m curious if anyone else who has my style of handle has figured out how to remove.
EggCola said:Hi everyone. I wanted to know if upgrade like this will affect the warranty in anyway? Thanks
squall_line said:EggCola said:Hi everyone. I wanted to know if upgrade like this will affect the warranty in anyway? Thanks
I don't see how it would, since the part is replaceable and doesn't have a strong material effect on the way the unit performs.
That said, if it's a concern, just don't lose the original lever and put it back in place if you ever need to send it in for warranty repair.