I agree with all the positive comments about the value of the track saws and the dust extractors, especially the CT22, CT36 and TS55. It is hardly a secret that I largely earned the money to build my current large shop based on the value and efficiency of my first TS55 and CT22 combination. With the guide rails I was able to accurately process plywood parts in a fraction of the space I would have needed to be as effective using any form of table saw.
However, for the the most outstanding Festool value is the OF1010. Even when I bought my first OF1010 just to drill LR32 holes I gladly would have paid 15% more for the OF1010. The day I decided to buy that plunge router, two holy rails and the LR32 kit I had budgeted the purchase of a traditional line drilling machine at several times the investment. Previously I had owned several line drilling machines. They are just swell in a factory production situation where the same part will be drilled for a long time. But in 2006 I was only making custom cabinets. I knew from the past that the time involved in un-screwing certain bits to skip holes was a total drag on efficiency. Also, remembering to re-install those skipped bit was a problem.
Back then the choice of holy rails was 1080mm and 2424mm. I was making a series of tall media storage cases more than conventional cabinets, so the long holy rail was a game changer for me. I could have made those parts with a line drilling machine, but doing so is a royal PIA. The first day I used the OF1010 with the LR32 kit and that 2424mm holy rail I finished what would have been an 8 hour job in 4 hours. As I gained experience and found shortcuts with the LR32 and OF1010 system I saved even more time per job.
Is there any wonder that before te end of 2006 I owned a total of 3 OF1010s?
Yes, the MFK700 costs more than many other trim routers. Still, I also find the MFK700 to be value priced relative to its efficiency. However, to realize that value you need to trim a whole lot of edging. I do trim a lot of edging so it worked out for me when the MFK700 reached the USA. Before that one of my OF1010 was devoted to edge trimming, a set up I still use when the edging is thicker than practical to trim with the MFK700.
Best of all, all of those tools work so well with a CT22. Festool really is a system.