Considering it's made in China, sold at a 40% lower MSRP than the PSC 420 and they just low-key announced a 420 successor it'd make perfect sense if they tried to market it as a gateway drug into the system (as someone commented earlier on the PSC-E-designator; similar to the essentials-only T18-Easy drill)Made in China, apparently. Which I'm finding hard to believe given Festool's history with jigsaws. Maybe they're going down the Altendorf path, where their basic machines are made in China but the flagship products are made in Germany.
The RSC 18 was the first.Is this their first Made-in-China tool? Are there any other examples of machines under the Festool brand that are Chinese products?
And what about accessories and consumables such as batteries as China is a leader in the battery industry?
I suppose management wouldn't be foolish enough to outsource their primary products (namely, track saws, miter saws and domino machines or even dust extractors) to China, which would basically destroy the German or EU linkage to the brand.
This is the path Metabo went down several years ago. But it’s not the same since Metabo’s corporate owners have a much different relationship with the brand than Festool’s owners. I have two of Metabo’s cordless jigsaws made in China and they’re not bad. The Bosch GST18V-60BC cordless jigsaw is made in Hungary.Made in China, apparently. Which I'm finding hard to believe given Festool's history with jigsaws. Maybe they're going down the Altendorf path, where their basic machines are made in China but the flagship products are made in Germany.
A few months ago, I was at a lumber supplier hanging with the owner - who has always believed in buying the best quality tools. He was showing me their Metabo drills (which IIRC are similar or the same as the Mafell?) - much nicer than the lineup I see at Lowes!This is the path Metabo went down several years ago. But it’s not the same since Metabo’s corporate owners have a much different relationship with the brand than Festool’s owners. I have two of Metabo’s cordless jigsaws made in China and they’re not bad. The Bosch GST18V-60BC cordless jigsaw is made in Hungary.
Metabo’s best drills are made in Germany and the Mafell cordless drill that Timberwolf used to sell (just looked and there are no drills at all at the Timberwolf site) was a rebadged Metabo. I have that drill (Metabo version) and it’s powerful and smooth but it’s so heavy I seldom use it.A few months ago, I was at a lumber supplier hanging with the owner - who has always believed in buying the best quality tools. He was showing me their Metabo drills (which IIRC are similar or the same as the Mafell?) - much nicer than the lineup I see at Lowes!
More like this:
On a similar note, I understand that the predecessor to the TPC was a direct conversion from the Protool acquisition. I noticed that Sedge has the Protool version in orange and he uses it with the Festool 18v battery. Is that to say that the Festool batteries came from Protool as well?
Just a 'slight' correction....
On a similar note, I understand that the predecessor to the TPC was a direct conversion from the Protool acquisition. I noticed that Sedge has the Protool version in orange and he uses it with the Festool 18v battery. Is that to say that the Festool batteries came from Protool as well?
The batteries used the same standard, just badged either orange or green. The DRC 18/4 and PDC 18/4 (the TDC & TPC's predecessors) were indeed originally Protool machines, hence they used the Centrotec system but had some incompatibilities by lacking the Fastfix system for e.g. the angled or eccentric chucks.On a similar note, I understand that the predecessor to the TPC was a direct conversion from the Protool acquisition. I noticed that Sedge has the Protool version in orange and he uses it with the Festool 18v battery. Is that to say that the Festool batteries came from Protool as well?
Correct....
Other Protool tools were rebranded back to Narex (the Festo-aquired Czech company that Protool was originally born out of to build a low-budget range of tools in 1994);
...
The batteries used the same standard, just badged either orange or green. The DRC 18/4 and PDC 18/4 (the TDC & TPC's predecessors) were indeed originally Protool machines, hence they used the Centrotec system but had some incompatibilities by lacking the Fastfix system for e.g. the angled or eccentric chucks.
There were in fact quite a few Protool machines that turned black & green after 2013, e.g. the DWC 2500 drywall gun was previously a 12V (later 18V) Protool machine, the Quadrill PD 20/4 and SSU 200 Sword Saw were direct conversions and the Protool VCP 170 dust extractor became the Festool C17.
Other Protool tools were rebranded back to Narex (the Festo-aquired Czech company that Protool was originally born out of to build a low-budget range of tools in 1994); e.g. the Protool DRP 10 EQ drill which is still available as the Narex EV 13 F-H3 today. Also the Narex EPL 12-7 BE jigsaw might also look eerily familar to you.
Protool was created from scratch as the *umbrella* brand/sales organization for selling Narex (initially the core of the portfolio), Festo, OMEGA (big saws) and many, many other specialised German tools
Wow that's some pretty comprehensive spreadsheets thanks Mino!@luvmytoolz
Not have, but this may help. These are the 'mapping' tables when Protool was winded down.
This doesn't include the stuff that continued under other brand names, like the current Spit wall chasers?
Correct. It does not.This doesn't include the stuff that continued under other brand names, like the current Spit wall chasers?
Have actually been thinking about doing that. Or even just to be more efficient in systainer storage in general. A lot of empty space in those vacuum formed inserts.....Some of you 3D printing guys should design a charger shaped container for accessories to put in the charger void in the Sys.