Jmaichel said:
Welcome to the FOG. First off the mindset that Festool tools are only for contractors or professionals is not correct. They fit in very nicely into a hobbyist shop, trust me I am a hobbyist and have a few Festool's. I don't have a Festool only shop but the items I do have fit nicely into my shop workflow. If your shop, like mine is shared with other household items or non shop related "stuff" then the dust collection part of the Festool system will become your best friend.
Don't think of it as a table saw vs track saw debate. I have both in my shop and they compliment each other nicely, I would not want to be without either. I would however suggest that if you do get a tracksaw you pony up th extra money for the TS75. I use the TS75 a lot for ripping 8/4 stock and edges on figured 4/4 stock that will tear out on my jointer. A lot of my woodworking is done late at night after the kid goes to bed and my Festool tools are considerably quieter than all of my machines or any other hand help power tools that I have used in the past.
Here is what I would recommend for Festools:
TS75
CT26
Extra guide rail (I like having a 1400 but would go with a 1900 if you are ripping full sheets)
MFT3 (a Few clamping elements, QWAS Dogs)
OF1400 (leave the 690 in the table)
ETS 150
Again I can't stress enough the point that Festool's work very well in the hobbyist shop and even though the quality level is "professional" don't think that they are only for contractors and pros.
Hope this helped!
James
James,
Thank you for the clarity. I often "Overbuy" when I want something. If I think I need an item and there are 4 options, I usually buy the option that is one step up from what I think I need, so I don't have to buy it again.

I like uniformity and efficiency which Festools seems to excel at. My friends joke that I am a little OCD so the dust collection will certainly make my projects more enjoyable. When I work for friends, I always tell them that the cleanup is up to them...I don't want to end up doing a project AND cleaning their house to my standards.

A lot of my work is done at night too, so the big tools are often saved till the weekends or first thing after I get home. Thank you for the list. It seems the tracksaw is being recommended by about everyone since I do own a tablesaw. And I guess I should look into the dust collection, since it seems like a logical step and not just something "extra" to round out a collection. Plus it might save me a lot of scowls from the gf and my friends significant others.
Regards,
Mr. Alighieri