Hi I'm in Canada and didn't know there was a recall on the RAS, years back, but I'm still using mine.
I see on the pads like the soft one, it says "speeds below 1100rpm", but nowhere in the instructions does it say what the rpms are for the various numbers on the dial?!
Can anyone help with this please. The edges of my soft stickfix are melted a bit so the hooks for velcro are gone.
I have the chart which says what dial numbers to use for various things, but nothing about what the rpm is. I wish Festool had checked that.
I find that for removing paint from some shelves it did a good job. I think I started with too high a grit first: 60, and it gummed up and jumped all over. When I tried a 40 and slowed it down it was better. Like the R90 Rotex, it's hard to keep them both flat. when I get it flat, it suddenly kicks off to one side and then the other. Frustrating as heck. Still working out the best way to use these.
Are we meant to keep them flat on the surface of slightly tipped so the edge gets more bite? But then you get swirl marks at thicker grits.
Tips would help.
This is great for really getting at it, and faster than the R90, at least for bigger surfaces.
I see on the pads like the soft one, it says "speeds below 1100rpm", but nowhere in the instructions does it say what the rpms are for the various numbers on the dial?!
Can anyone help with this please. The edges of my soft stickfix are melted a bit so the hooks for velcro are gone.
I have the chart which says what dial numbers to use for various things, but nothing about what the rpm is. I wish Festool had checked that.
I find that for removing paint from some shelves it did a good job. I think I started with too high a grit first: 60, and it gummed up and jumped all over. When I tried a 40 and slowed it down it was better. Like the R90 Rotex, it's hard to keep them both flat. when I get it flat, it suddenly kicks off to one side and then the other. Frustrating as heck. Still working out the best way to use these.
Are we meant to keep them flat on the surface of slightly tipped so the edge gets more bite? But then you get swirl marks at thicker grits.
Tips would help.
This is great for really getting at it, and faster than the R90, at least for bigger surfaces.