Michael Kellough said:
"You could get TWO Bosch GDA's" except that they're not available in North America.
The RO 90 may not be as good in Delta mode as the tools you praise but it's also a rotary tool that is outstanding in smoothing concave areas with a small radius. For that work the Metabo SXE 400 is the only option here and it is much slower than the RO 90 in the rough work stage.
You first point is valid. They are no longer available; not only in the new world, but in the whole world. Bosch, like many other manufacturers it seems have successfully deluded both themselves and customers into thinking that an oscillating tool is now a viable abrader of softer substrates. Idiots. It isn't. Nevertheless, there must be plenty of other quality deltas available in the peculiar voltage characteristics of the 3 north american nations. Hitachi-Koki, Makita, Metabo, Flex, DeWalt, Draper, Einhell, AEG, Ferm, Sparky, Narex et al.? Realistically, even a cheapie house brand will be a better buy simply by virtue of superior ergonomics and compactness. Then there's Festo's Deltex, which is just a much, much more useful (or rather "less useless") tool.
To suggest that a tool is not available locally is maybe a mite disingenuous. Maybe it can't be purchased at your local corner store, (neither can a Festo) but just about anything as small, lightweight, inexpensive and globally available as a (hand-held) power tool is mere days away from your doorstep. I've bought products as diverse as lawn mowers and jackhammers internationally through mail order. I'm also led to believe that this is how many lonely men in the western world acquire their spouses these days!
You're quite correct in stating that in ROTary mode Festo's 90 will abrade more rapidly than Metabo's little SeXE, but only in the less restricted areas of a less than rectilinear form that it can actually access. Any larger Rotex sander will be correspondingly more rapid again. Maybe for you it's different, but I've found the Festo 90 to be a particular poor performer in accessing many forms of concavities. The silly dust ducting effectively precludes access, to the point of uselessness in many cases. Alternative rotary tools will do the job so much better. At almost ludicrously reduced prices too. A basic arbour fitted to any old drill with a 50mm wobble pad will be more effective despite costing mere pocket money. An Arbortech Turboshaft or Contour Random Sander both comprehensively address not only the accessability issues, but have an abrasive appetite for wood that makes all others pale in comparison when used in freeform carvings and the like. They have quite justifiably won high praise in the process. I could purchase some TEN of either of these for the price of Festo's 90.
The Festo Rotex 90 is in fairness a reasonably good tool in its own right. Fairly well designed, but fundamentally flawed in its execution and also comprehensively outperformed in every single one of it's (albeit versatile) functions by more specialised & much less expensive alternatives.