Need a cordless router - OFKC 500 and North America

Ebuwan

Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2017
Messages
260
Hi All,

Anyone know if there are plans of the 500 trim router coming to the US? I can't find anything stating such online at all.

Or should i just get the Milwaukee?

THanks,

Ev
 
Can't compare to the Festool, but I have used Milwaukee, Makita and DeWalt cordless palm routers at work and the Milwaukee is what I bought for my shop at home. The Makita is very good, too, but I like the collet on the Milwaukee better. It also helped that I'm deep into Milwaukee 18V for my lawn and garden gear. The plunge base for the Milwaukee is nice. Swapping bases seems a bit easier on the Milwaukee than others and the micro-adjuster on the fixed base works very nicely (Makita doesn't have micro-adjust). Any Milwaukee 18V battery will work, but the little ones (2Ah and 3Ah, I think) give the best balance and last a surprisingly long time. If you already have batteries and charger for one "M" or the other, just pick the one you're already invested in. I am confident you'll be happy with either. If at some time in the future Festool decides NA is worthy, if you're like most of us, adding yet another router to the stable will be the smart move.
 
OFK500 / OFKC500 are really specialty tools. I would *strongly* advise you check out the OFK 500 in person at some local dealer.

It is one of those tools which you either absolutely must have once you see how it works, or you find it too restrictive as you do not use a trim router enough for it to matter.

Those small OFK 500s are definitely *not* directly relatable to any other trim router out there. Starting with the special bits they use..

ADD:
If you are not looking into the OFK 500 specialty trimmers - which I presume you are likely not - the MFK/MFKC 700 series are a much better option as the cordless router of choice.
But no idea when that one comes to US.

I would consider a small Makita or Milwaukee and the MFKC 700 as the "daddy" option upgrade once it comes.
 
Last edited:
Unlike other tools that I thought I needed a cordless version (including, drill, nail guns, screw driver, circular saw, air compressor), I’ve never felt limited by the tether of an electric cord on the router.

Most often I use it at the work bench. And when I bring it to a location, it generally does not require much mobility.

So, I am wondering what situations are driving the need for a cordless router?

I would say I would be loath to give up cordless nail guns, circular saw and electric drill, in that order. Of the three, I would want to keep my corded electric drill always because of its higher spin speeds and rpms under load. So far, I have found no need for a cordless track saw.
 
Of the three, I would want to keep my corded electric drill always because of its higher spin speeds and rpms under load.
Depends on what you are comparing.

I have a wired Metabo SBE 850 Impuls. I basicly... never use it. The rpm is higher yes, but not double. The low-rpm torque is absolutely sh*t and when the drill bit bites the kick is gigantic due to it's enormous rotating mass. No thanks.
 
So, I am wondering what situations are driving the need for a cordless router?
I've had the Makita R0701 for quite some time and about a year ago, ended up getting a great deal on the Hercules 20v. It's a great router that I try to connect to dust collection as much as possible. And while I mostly use corded tools and never complain about it, the cordless is quite nice. Except when you're doing longer sessions and you run out of battery. To me, that's really the downside.

I've also got the DeWalt 620 cordless router, which is performing really great. But, on a recent project, it was like I was PLOWING through the PowerStack batteries. Luckily, I've got a lot of DW batteries but I was going through them - and their chargers aren't like the TCL6...
 
I have two Porter Cable 690 routers (corded) that I got on sale (when they went out of production) at Lowes for $49.00 each, new in the box. Very good routers. I guess they had good reason to replace them, but I find them fine.

I have a Craftsman router which I purchase in 1964 or 1965 (before i got my drivers license, and I rode to Sears on my bicycle to get it) and it still works (but it is basically decorative. When the motor brushes wear out, I doubt I can keep it running.).

I replaced my pneumatic nail gun with a battery powered one, when the hose and compressor became unmanageable in a small bathroom remodel (plus the P-C 15 gage nailer was extremely unreliable).

i replaced my P-C circular saw when I was working on my deck and the cord was a nuisance. But, basically the cord has to become an obstacle before I make a switch to battery.

I especially like my corded drill for dowel work. The cooling fan does double duty as a blower to clear sawdust.
 
Back
Top