Wood_Junkie
Member
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2009
- Messages
- 1,311
So, I've been dazzled with the TS55 and all of its virtues and capabilities. I've been annoying coworkers and my wife and friends extolling it's amazing cut results and how accurate and easy it makes precision activities. Yay, I love the TS55 (and the rails and the CT).
But last night, I needed to cut up an old door we removed from a bedroom (now officially the kids' play-room). It won't fit in our city garbage bins, and it's too junky and ruined to justify putting it at the curb for others to salvage and reuse (it would not even serve as a benchtop.. had panels). So, I wanted to cut it down so it'd fit in the bins.
Now, I tried ONE time to do a free-hand cross-cut with the TS55 and it kinda scared the bejeesus out of me. It kicked back since it's hard to maintain the plunge one-handed.
So, I did NOT reach for my TS55. I grabbed my PC 324 and tore into that thing, sitting on top of snowy-topped garbage bins, secured by nothing but gravity and my off-hand. I cut that thing with crooked, wandering cuts that went up and over the rails and across the panels. Needless to say, the door got cut up in shamefully awesome fashion.
I definitely saw some sparks while cutting, so I went through some finish nails and possibly even a screw... Not something for our beloved Festool blades. I had previously listed my circular saw on CL, thinking I'd use those funds to help fund more green goodness... but now I'm reconsidering. For cuts where I really am not overly concerned about quality, and/or need some sponaneous cross-cutting (2x4s come to mind), perhaps the TS55 is not the best choice, as it does require setup.
So, I'm curious... if you have a Festool equivalent of a given tool (e.g. circular saw, sawzall/jigsaw, sander), do you keep a lesser tool? Is there a specific purpose for which you keep it/them, or just nostalgia or too lazy/busy to sell them? Loaners for "friends"? Ha!
But last night, I needed to cut up an old door we removed from a bedroom (now officially the kids' play-room). It won't fit in our city garbage bins, and it's too junky and ruined to justify putting it at the curb for others to salvage and reuse (it would not even serve as a benchtop.. had panels). So, I wanted to cut it down so it'd fit in the bins.
Now, I tried ONE time to do a free-hand cross-cut with the TS55 and it kinda scared the bejeesus out of me. It kicked back since it's hard to maintain the plunge one-handed.
So, I did NOT reach for my TS55. I grabbed my PC 324 and tore into that thing, sitting on top of snowy-topped garbage bins, secured by nothing but gravity and my off-hand. I cut that thing with crooked, wandering cuts that went up and over the rails and across the panels. Needless to say, the door got cut up in shamefully awesome fashion.
I definitely saw some sparks while cutting, so I went through some finish nails and possibly even a screw... Not something for our beloved Festool blades. I had previously listed my circular saw on CL, thinking I'd use those funds to help fund more green goodness... but now I'm reconsidering. For cuts where I really am not overly concerned about quality, and/or need some sponaneous cross-cutting (2x4s come to mind), perhaps the TS55 is not the best choice, as it does require setup.
So, I'm curious... if you have a Festool equivalent of a given tool (e.g. circular saw, sawzall/jigsaw, sander), do you keep a lesser tool? Is there a specific purpose for which you keep it/them, or just nostalgia or too lazy/busy to sell them? Loaners for "friends"? Ha!