hanshamm said:
I think this is poor product design. Festool does a great job grounding their system and its completely static free...as advertised. This isn't a difficult design feature and I hate that the DD is my weak link. I shouldn't need to modify this product because it should be integrated. Being an engineer I look poorly upon this oversight. You would never see this type of quality/design issue from Festool that's why people love them so much. This is a dead simple setup...there isn't much to understand here. A circuit collects static charge to deliver to the ground. Circuit is broken you get shocked. There is no reason on a Festool vac it shouldn't be plug and play.
Maybe I need more coffee, but this response really gets under my skin. He's an engineer, and thus, I assume, he's capable of problem solving. And he's buying Festool, thus I assume he's actually interested in making, modifying, and building things. As problems go, this isn't a doozy, and the FOG as a resource has a lot of helpful suggestions to offer. I would think that someone with a brain and an interest in making and modifying really wouldn't be averse to, you know, making and modifying his setup to be better than the sum of the parts. But because the MFR hasn't made everything easy for him, he's not satisfied.
I don't mean to start a flame war, I really don't. But I spend so much time tweaking and tuning everything in my shop, that I really can't relate to this viewpoint. I just don't assume anything about out of the box components, except that they won't be at their best, much like little children, until I get to know them, and figure out how best to integrate them. The raw material isn't plug and play, most shop spaces aren't either. Every tool and every setup I have can always be better... Each improvement leads to a new revelation about what can be optimized. It's status quo, and ongoing. Evolution, man...