Long time Festool sander user. Wondering what you use the various sander pads for?
Years ago I switched to the hard pads on my random orbital sanders to get better results on pine and red oak and to get truly flat surfaces on really dense materials. This was to reduce the excess sanding on the softer grain areas. I also use the hard pad on round over edges at times without problems. Definitely saw an improvement on panel sanding with the hard pads and have stuck with them ever since.
Got me thinking, what are the best uses for the tool supplied soft pad? Also the super soft pad? Or the interface pads? Seems to me a pad that orbits no matter how soft is going to eat off material on one side of a curve and not give a reliable contoured effect. The soft pad over the 5-6" pad area resists flexing for contours in my limited experience yet under performs on flat surfaces. Doesn't seem soft enough for contoured surfaces. The super soft pad seems would only be a benefit for sanding or buffing something like a boat with a gradual curve to it.
Ramblings from a curious mind this morning.
Years ago I switched to the hard pads on my random orbital sanders to get better results on pine and red oak and to get truly flat surfaces on really dense materials. This was to reduce the excess sanding on the softer grain areas. I also use the hard pad on round over edges at times without problems. Definitely saw an improvement on panel sanding with the hard pads and have stuck with them ever since.
Got me thinking, what are the best uses for the tool supplied soft pad? Also the super soft pad? Or the interface pads? Seems to me a pad that orbits no matter how soft is going to eat off material on one side of a curve and not give a reliable contoured effect. The soft pad over the 5-6" pad area resists flexing for contours in my limited experience yet under performs on flat surfaces. Doesn't seem soft enough for contoured surfaces. The super soft pad seems would only be a benefit for sanding or buffing something like a boat with a gradual curve to it.
Ramblings from a curious mind this morning.
