Message from Festool about Kapex Miter Saw

Administrator_JSVN

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 22, 2007
Messages
8,426
All,
As this topic has appeared on this forum and other places, we would like to take this opportunity to share a message with you about it.  As loyal and faithful customers, we cherish your support and interest in our company and our brand.  Thank you for continued support and for your engagement and involvement with this very special community.  You help make us what we are and we appreciate you.

-----

Dear Festool Customer,

We would like to extend our appreciation for your interest in Festool and the Festool Kapex Miter Saw.  The Kapex was originally launched in North America in 2008 with the intent to introduce a saw that provided full capacity while providing low weight and being worthy of the Festool name.  Additionally, the Kapex is a feature-laden machine that was intended to provide the most advanced features in the market.  We combined these features with several design and construction points to help ensure longevity both in accuracy as well as performance.

Over the years, we also continually looked for ways to improve the saw itself to further enhance durability and longevity.  Some of these changes were never specifically marketed as it is a normal part of the constant quality improvement process that we implement to provide the world’s finest power tools.

In recent years, some customers presented machines that seemed to have issues related to the motor longevity.  Some of these machines had been working in the shop and the jobsite for years under various conditions and others may not have had as much use.  These issues were random and individual, and a bit perplexing for us and it is not a normal experience for our motors.  While we attempted to work with every customer to provide a high-quality product and address these issues as part of our commitment to provide high-quality service, some of the issues became public and brought even more attention to these issues.

Since 2017 we have made improvements to the internal structure of motor components to produce an even more reliable machine.  We are confident that users will no longer experience these issues.

We truly apologize if you, our customer, may have been affected by this, and did not feel that we, as a company, served you in the way you expect.  The blame is then on us as an organization, certainly not with our product, the KAPEX. We assure you that the KAPEX is produced and tested to the highest quality standards and we, as Festool, stand fully behind this product.

We hope that you see this statement as a sincere step to regain your invaluable trust in our products and in our company.

With our sincerest gratitude,

Festool
 
No words of assurance (or reassurance), such as extension of warranty, for owners of Kapexes bought before 2019 (?) at all. [scratch chin]

It will be a few years before we know if indeed the "new" Kapexes no longer suffer from whatever that has been working against the older Kapex...or whether this announcement is just a marketing effort to promote the sales of Kapex, given its bad reputation in the woodworking community.

I wonder if the "improvements to the internal structure of motor components to produce an even more reliable machine" can be applied to the pre-2019 Kapexes. Perhaps some kind of a "recall" (common in the automobile industry) would help repair the machine's reputation.

Also, did anyone who bought a Kapex after 2017 (assuming new Kapexes produced thereafter are using the improved components) experience the smoking motor issue?
 
[member=101]Festool USA[/member]
Thank you!  So that was helpful to know that you did implement some changes to improve the reliability and when you started to add those changes to production models.  For those of us with older saws, would those improved parts be used when servicing a pre-2017 saw?  So in theory if it were to break it would be a once and done repair?  Or is that not really possible due to the nature of the changes that were implemented?
 
I think the post is a refreshing change from a lot of the denial many have experienced from Festool. So I think a post on these lines was overdue. This also confirms the failures were not a myth.

I have recently bought the latest Kapex KS 120 REB, and i am genuinely very pleased with it, and feel pretty confident it will last a good few years. I still feel for the owners of the older saws, that still pose a risk though.

Thanks for providing some clarity.
 
So, let me condense your statement,

-We've known there were issues in the past but decided not to say anything about it until now.
-We're admitting it now because "the issues became public and drew even more attention to the issues."
-The issues were "random, individual, and a bit perplexing", but we've implemented a fix for the machines built in 2017 and beyond.
-We're not going to tell what the issues were or how we fixed them, but "we're confident that users will no longer experience these issues."
-Although we're confident it's been fixed, we're not so confident as to warrant the motors beyond the initial period.
-Although we knew there were issues in time to implement a fix in 2017, we still took the repair money from our loyal customer base  "as part of our commitment to high-quality service" and "stand fully behind this product".
-Blame us, Festool; not Kapex, the product...and feel free to buy a new Kapex.

Have I accurately captured your statement?

 
More concisely

Dear customers who had to pay repair costs when the motor failed just after 3 yrs or had to pay shipping costs when it failed after 1  year; too bad, so sad.

 
I literally just got my Kapex back today,.... with 3 months left on the warranty.

  [thumbs up] [thumbs up] [thumbs up] [thumbs up] [thumbs up]
 
So nice to see them say something, I'd say over due, but they aren't required to say something.

The post seems to confirm what has been said in other threads on it, that Festool very well does not understand the root problem, and from their statement they threw changes at it and are hoping for the best but still are not sure it will work.

Anyone else when they started reading it thought it was going to say that Festool was going to discontinue the Kapex in North America.  Really sounded like a goodbye/Eulogy. Or announce they will now sell the 230V model in North America along with a 230V CT.
 
Though I have NOT had a issue with mine which I bought approx 2011. It has been shop bound and works great.

A good friend of mine in the UK had own 2 Kapex's and had issues with both of them.  Had them both in for repair. He got frustrated and sold them. Now he has a Dewalt. He messaged me last night and told me about it. He hasnt used t on te job yet but he told me it cuts very accurate.

Anyway I happy Festool finally acknowledged what was happening. It did take a while for them to acknowledge the issue. This could be because of the recent questionaire they sent out. Folks requesting something from the company.
 
Still ain’t “buyin’ it”...
The Yada Yada Yada...
Or the saw.

Old saying:
“Ya can put lipstick on a pig...
      But it’s still a pig.”
We’ll see what happens.
 
Regardless of what Festool does some people will see it as glass half empty, others as half full. It's time to let it go.
 
Cheese said:
Snip.

There’s a large amount of shame here that needs to be addressed. The sooner the better because the blood loss is less.

The honorable thing Festool should do is one of these:
- Do a "recall" for all the pre-2017(?) Kapexes, and replace whatever applicable with the "improved" parts

- If the above is technically or financially not possible, offer/extend a one-time two-year warranty (on top of any warranty remaining) to all pre-2017 Kapexes.

Doing that will win the hearts of not only existing Festool owners (not just the Kapex owners), but also those of not-yet Festool owners eyeing the Kapex.

Does Festool have the spine to do what is right?
 
Svar said:
Regardless of what Festool does some people will see it as glass half empty, others as half full. It's time to let it go.

When the Kapex's motor issue was repeatedly brought up over the past four years (?), a similar call of letting it go had been floated. I suppose the Kapex announcement we saw today wouldn't have happened if indeed we had heed such call.
 
How about publishing a range of serial numbers which let you know if you've got the fixed version or not, or ranges of serial numbers if the fixes were incremental.  That way those of us who bought a Kapex in the last couple of years could have a clue where we stand.
 
Chuck I’m with you 100%...automobiles are recalled, bicycles are recalled and even computers and cell phones are recalled. So what’s wrong with recalling the Kapex? 

For the last 100 years this saying has held sway.  An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
 
I think their statements explain why there is no recall or list of serial numbers.  If we take their statement for what it is, they confirmed that they never figured out what was wrong.  So they made some changes, if those make it different, they don't know.  If they found "the smoking gun" they probably could have/would have done something more actionable.

Also recalls happen for safety reasons, not quality.  Unless Kapex's were burning folks workshops to the ground, there wouldn't be a recall.

Festool could have handle this situation better, but as I've said elsewhere before, in various ways, be in their shoes.  A product may be having issues. Your engineers can't find anything wrong or a root cause,  what are you going to do.  Tweeks that you think may beef things up or reduce stuff will get applied and you will wait and see if anything changes.  It's easy to yell that they should have done this or that and that you wouldn't have done this if you were festool, but that's not reality of making products and running a company.  Just like all of use get stumped on why things don't work, or things we can't figure out, so do companies.  Sometimes it just is what it is.

I do think offering 230V tools in the US is/can be a valid solution.  It would have given buyers more options and festool could have de-rated the kapex 110v some as a path of giving it some margin. But also by selling the kapex in both voltages, it would have given Festool a chance to see how the market responded, to options, which would be important due the the Kapex situation.

 
I am pleased to see that Festool is acknowledging there is a problem.  To me this is a big step.  I purchased my Kapex in Dec. 2017.

Bob
 
DeformedTree said:
Snip.
Also recalls happen for safety reasons, not quality.  Unless Kapex's were burning folks workshops to the ground, there wouldn't be a recall.

The recent recall of the Honda CRV in Canada was about rust problems, not safety related at all.

In any case, "recall" I used is in quotation marks, referring to the kind of action warranted.
 
Whatever FT does or doesn't do ppl read what they want to read. If they (FT) say nothing they're in denial, if they say something its marketing.

At the end its pretty simple and their statement kind of support this. FT never got the root of the problem and for some people thats hard to understand and accept (I get it, when shell out a fortune then it is hard). To find the real cause, you need to be able to replicate the problem. Thats the only way to you will be able to see if a fix truly works. But thats easier said than done.

Now, FT could use this opportunity to rise above the occasion and assure those pre 2017 owners that they extend the warranty to this specific issue. If in the near future the engine does goes up in smoke, they will replace it. That might take away the concerns and would show FT does care for its customers and takes this specific instance very serious. Not because they would be legally bound or are afraid for bad publicity (such things exists?), but because they truly, truly care, Making a step beyond what's expected. If their is a time to show what FT is made of, now is the time.

For the community it would be obviously better if FT could explain what they exactly changed and what they think is causing it. Most of us We are not stupid and some reasonable explanation would be valued as plausible (or not). Even if they are not 100% sure it was the cause. But for different reasons, that might to a bridge too far.

Nevertheless, they do my have my appreciation to have made an effort and therefor the for me, the glass is ½ full. You can call me a naive idiot, but I like to believe that, even into todays world, not everything is about money. If it was, it would be a (very) sad place.
 
Back
Top