duburban said:What might be interesting, in this thread or another, is a survey of the brands of saws and how long it has lasted under what type of use to help put things into perspective.
Cheese said:duburban said:What might be interesting, in this thread or another, is a survey of the brands of saws and how long it has lasted under what type of use to help put things into perspective.
Whoa....you don't even want to go there, because it will not be pretty. I'm a big fan of Festool but a Kapex longevity survey versus all the others will not bode well for Festool. I even think Festool would discourage this type of competitive event...second thought this could be interesting, but then again....................... there isn't a problem, so why would this even be necessary?
duburban said:The idea of the survey is to address the idea that cheaper tools fail and are thrown away never to be discussed.
The older fellows I work with replace saws when they have been too badly disfigured from transport and abuse, not use.
bobfog said:On the one hand you never see people making a post to say their Kapex is working fine and lots of them, probably massively more than break down, last a long time compared to those that break. So now with that stating the obvious defence out of the way...
It must be statistically impossible that there isn't a problem with the Kapex saws. The sheer number of post in the last year prove that it must by law of averages be a big problem. It's one of Festool's most expensive tools and yet you hear about it breaking down on a weekly basis. The only way this logic could be wrong is if the cheaper tools that Festool sell more of are breaking down just as often, but people don't post about it.
When are Festool going to face up and do the decent thing and fix/recall them? I really would like to buy a Kapex, but not until there's an official admission and rectification of the faults!
rizzoa13 said:Just saw this post again and wanted to remind anyone on the fence about this saw that nothing's been done about the motor for a time span measuring by in the years now. Yet completely new tools have been developed, new service protocols have been put into effect, almost all metric tools in the US are being switched from metric to imperial and now Festool has run a massive discount sale on sanders to increase market penetration in the United States.
That's quite a lot of activity from then that has nothing to do with a mechanical failure issue on their most expensive saw. After thinking about it like that I really have no respect for them anymore.
rizzoa13 said:Just saw this post again and wanted to remind anyone on the fence about this saw that nothing's been done about the motor for a time span measuring by in the years now. Yet completely new tools have been developed, new service protocols have been put into effect, almost all metric tools in the US are being switched from metric to imperial and now Festool has run a massive discount sale on sanders to increase market penetration in the United States.
That's quite a lot of activity from then that has nothing to do with a mechanical failure issue on their most expensive saw. After thinking about it like that I really have no respect for them anymore.
bigdogmedia said:For those whom the warranty has expired. would it not be cheaper to get the armature rewound by a company that specializes in doing this type of work? I'm sure that the cost would not be anywhere near what Festool is charging to fix it.
Peter Durand said:I have had my Kapex for a number of years. Works well. BUT, it has been my practice to get it running to full speed before lowering it to the wood. And not rush the cut. Thick, or in my case mostly thin. I remember reading somewhere that that is the proper way to treat these motors (electronic controlled).
A while ago I had a carpenter doing some work in my home. He was about to do some miter cuts on 2X4s and other thin stock outside on some sawhorses.I told him he could use my "miter saw" in the shop...save setting up etc. He was delighted. So the wood was set against the fence and he proceeded to grab the trigger and start the saw whilst lowering it on to the wood. The result was, to say the least, not good. The vac (connected) did not have time to come up to speed (dust all over) and the cut was very coarse. Lots of tear out. But that is how I suspect most folks in the trade use a "chop saw".
Needless to say I cut the rest of the wood.
I know people have said they baby their Kapex, but I wonder if technique might be a factor.
BTW, after reading this thread, I also am somewhat anxious about the longevity of my expensive saw.
Cheers,
Peter
We are dealing with a company from another country. There may be a cultural component preventing admission or gratis resolution. Teutonic pride!rizzoa13 said:Whatever the failure rate is its statistically significant enough that festool won't just cover the costs of the burnt out motors. I run a small business and while I'm not in sales i do sell myself on quality. If I had a few issues with my work id RUN back to fix them and save face. If I had a larger amount of issues and was going to lose my shirt then I might keep mum on the issue and just hope it goes away. (I wouldn't do this no matter what)