TylerC said:As a member of the Festool marketing team, I'm going to eventually get an ulcer from these fake-out complaint posts. Well played, [member=60286]bobfog[/member]. Well played. [big grin]
And I'm glad that the CXS is working out well for you. Honestly, I was a bit skeptical about it at first, too. It's proven to be incredibly useful.
bobfog said:Any idea about the issue I mentioned a few posts above RE the trigger occasionally not doing anything then once released immediately working again?
TylerC said:bobfog said:Any idea about the issue I mentioned a few posts above RE the trigger occasionally not doing anything then once released immediately working again?
I haven't heard of that happening with anyone else. It could be a bad connection, but it doesn't appear to be a common thing. If it keeps happening, you might want to send it in for inspection.
leakyroof said:I just used my CXS a few days ago to sneak some screws into a bracket with the 90 degree head. The only quirk or complaint about this drill that I've ever run into is that the 90 degree head can get jammed on the body of the drill. Then I have to lightly tap it off with a plastic deadblow mallet/hammer.
. I tried that at the time, thinking a reversal of torque might help. It didn't , BUT, I didn't really have a load on the drill in reverse, just freewheeling the drill..peterboy said:leakyroof said:I just used my CXS a few days ago to sneak some screws into a bracket with the 90 degree head. The only quirk or complaint about this drill that I've ever run into is that the 90 degree head can get jammed on the body of the drill. Then I have to lightly tap it off with a plastic deadblow mallet/hammer.
If this happens again engage reverse, a quick pull on the trigger and it'll come right off.
TylerC said:bobfog said:Any idea about the issue I mentioned a few posts above RE the trigger occasionally not doing anything then once released immediately working again?
I haven't heard of that happening with anyone else. It could be a bad connection, but it doesn't appear to be a common thing. If it keeps happening, you might want to send it in for inspection.
bobfog said:(we're men not mice, aren't we?).
bobfog said:As for comfort, I do remember bemoaning my Makita that sometimes dug into the fleshy part between my thumb and index finger after prolonged use, so maybe I was more concerned with comfort than initially gave credit to.