what was your first festool

honeydoman

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i just took a picture of my first festool that I bought  several years ago the atf55 saw and rail... at the time I did not know that this tool would end up costing me over 17 gran !  cuz once i bought one I had to get another, and another, and on and on and on !  but hey they work, they provide value and last a long time and makes my work go faster and easier.

what was your first festool?
 
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just got the boxes open.

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so I guess I need to buy a festool sander.  Just can't make up my mind on what one to get.

My first Festool purchase was the CT MIDI, TS 55 and MFT/3.   Since then, my blood has turned green!

Eric
 
the 125 would be a good first one for basic and finish work, but I am sure that everybody here will come up with another one, so you may have to buy several !
based upon your picture sanding then the 125 would be good it is a 5" and works great with the vac.

thanks for posting so quickly !
 
erock said:
so I guess I need to buy a festool sander.  Just can't make up my mind on what one to get.

My first Festool purchase was the CT MIDI, TS 55 and MFT/3.   Since then, my blood has turned green!

Eric

Oh yes, try refurbished ETS-125 or ES-125. ES-125 works well too.

Regards,
VictorL
 
Thanks guys...
but I don't want to take over this post with sanding options  [wink].
I guess I should have used that picture in a different post.  Sorry!
Eric
 
TS 55, and it rocked my world.  Haven't stopped buying festool since (much to the chagrin of the Mrs.)

Jon
 
Yup, the TS55 got me hooked.  Like so many others, it has snowballed out of controll  [blink]

Woodguy
 
A ts55, ct22,MFT, and, a 2700 guide rail about 5 years ago. One of the best tool purchases I could have made.
 
TS55, RO 125 and an ETS 125. Same effect as everyone else, but well worth every penny.
 
ts 55.
i think my current systainers are pregnent aswell as i am expecting several more soon [big grin]
 
Mine was also a AFT 55 saw, rail, and vac.  Here is a photo of the saw right out the box taken just over 8 years ago:

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In mid-January 2006 I was on vacation, mostly because I wanted to build some projects. My old pal Jesse Barragan had moved his Eagle Tools to a new location. I knew Jesse specialized in really good woodworking tools. I also knew I did not have space for a decent table saw.

Walking into Eagle Tool of Los Angeles that Friday changed my life! There I could use a TS55 with guide rails. Not only were the cuts straight, they were exact and best of all, in 19mm plywood those cuts were glue-ready. With the dust extractor there was no mess, perfect for a spare room in my condo!

Before I left that afternoon I purchased a CT22 w/handle with the TS55, two extra 1400mm (55") guide rails, an accessory kits mostly for the connector bars, 2 extra 48 tooth blades, 2 each Quick and Screw clamps. That Saturday, after studying the Festool catalog over night, I went back for a 36mm x 5m AS hose included with the Tradesperson/Installer cleaning set, a Multi-Purpose floor nozzle, Universal Brush nozzle, 20 filter bags and Suction hose holder.

Although just 2 weeks before I had purchased a Melé vac set, because the CT22 was so quiet and variable speed, it became my primary cleaning vac and well as my dust extractor.

The next Wednesday I went back for an OF1010, an LR32 1080mm (42") rail and the LR 32 Hole drilling set and a lot of other OF1010 accessories.

Well, that was my start. By the time my 5 week vacation had ended I had completed several projects, I had purchased a RO 150 and RTS 400 sanders.

As soon as I returned to work I decided to retire so I could start building cabinets as a business. By the time I did retire in January 2007, I had made arrangements to use space in the shops of several friends, in addition to my condo. I also then started buying even more Festools. My custom cabinet business kept growing and growing. Renting space in other people's shops became a logistical nightmare. In early 2010 I started looking for my own shop building.

By then I was convinced I needed many large fixed machines not owned by people I knew. I wanted a pressure beam saw, which I had read about. Seeing one in action was the deal maker. Several friends had CNC nested routers large enough for 4x8' sheet goods and I learned to use those. Such machines need space. I kept asking my real estate agent to look for increasingly larger buildings. Finally we found a really good building of 12,600 square feet on 30,000 square feet of land running between two industrial streets. In that I would have room for a really large sliding table saw, an automatic edge bander and the other typical shop machines: shaper; joiner; thickness planer; bandsaws; vertical edge belt sander; wide belt sander. I already owned a Kapex and I bought another. I remodeled the building to bring the restroom up to ADA standards, increased the electrical service to 480v 3 ph (1,500 KVA) and added a really sophisticated plant DC system. To handle all the sheet goods efficiently I bought a new electric fork lift and also 2 vacuum lifts to move individual sheets from stacks to the tables of the beam saw and the CNC router. For assembly we have power-driven case clamps.

Just think, it all started with that CT22 and TS55!
 
RO 125 with a CT-22.  Damn, that was expensive. [blink]

I was back a week later for more, curse you Festool!! [big grin]
 
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