They scammed you out of 100Kg of steel ! Your cabinet would have been better made out of 6mm plate.... The concrete block was the heaviest component at about 100 KG.
But it would have been harder to manoeuvre
They scammed you out of 100Kg of steel ! Your cabinet would have been better made out of 6mm plate.... The concrete block was the heaviest component at about 100 KG.
I had the same problem with my TRA001 and cured it by moving the dust extraction from the fence and connecting underneath to the router body,I've no doubt the Jessem lift will be better (it should be for the price), but the only problem I've had with the TRA001 on a router table was some parts getting clogged with sawdust (so I couldn't raise it all the way up).
My main gripes are when I forget to slide the power switch on the body (which prevents the router lifting up for bit changes), and then forgetting to turn it back on after lowering - but that whole point of that is safety, so I can't really complain. I have the router controlled with an NVR switch BTW, so the power switch on the body is always on in use.
They scammed you out of 100Kg of steel ! Your cabinet would have been better made out of 6mm plate
But it would have been harder to manoeuvre
Why not just use a foot switch, both hands firmly on the router and no issues. I also use one with my pillar drill, again to keep hands free.The way the safety switch was oriented with the trigger was just hell for me.
Recently I've mainly been using the router table for simple flush trimming and round over jobs, and have been using a vac hose in the port on the router body (where I'd generally favour extraction on the fence when doing large runs of rebate cuts) - so you might be onto something there.I had the same problem with my TRA001 and cured it by moving the dust extraction from the fence and connecting underneath to the router body,
Could have done I guess, it was all site work so 110v and I didn`t own them myself they were supplied by the boss.Why not just use a foot switch, both hands firmly on the router and no issues. I also use one with my pillar drill, again to keep hands free.
I think this is a bit of a simplistic view. The festool tool will outlive any of your trend/triton/DeWalt by several generations while being more satisfying to use.Don't fall into the festool trap, you pay a lot for the name and there are often equal or better products out there, for me my XL700 is my only Festool tool because no one else makes one and I still cannot get to grips with it so I still revert back to dowels.
It is everyone to their own, for me I do not have brand loyality and totally disagree, having used Bosch, AEG, Makita and many other non festool brands over the last forty five years with no problems and with many other people using similar to earn a crust. Festool is to woodworking what apple is to phones, you either like them or hate them with little middle ground and the reason they get so much praise is just like anyone buying a new expensive car in that that they have to try and justify the cost. If you take away the dust extraction aspect then a Makita, Bosch or dewalt tracksaw can cut sheet goods all day long on site as well as an expensive festool tracksaw. I only own one festool tool and that wins the worst tool accolade by a mile for me, it is the xl700 domino and yes it cuts a nice hole for a domino but the quality of the machine is NOT outstanding when compared to say the dewalt biscuit joiner or many othertools, it is just comparable. Festool admits that the 700 is not always accurate because they have provided the sloppy setting, you dont drill a 10mm hole for a 6mm bolt to guarantee alignment. The dowelmax is much slower but way more accurate, I can place two rows of dowels along a length of wood and guarantee alignment, with dowels there is no room for error. Yes the domino can make nice holes to a set depth quickly but for me location, location, location is more important. With all the other festool products there are decent alternatives, but as yet not for the domino.I think this is a bit of a simplistic view. The festool tool will outlive any of your trend/triton/DeWalt by several generations while being more satisfying to use.
Good point, I've had extraction issues on my Triton in the router table(fault of the table,not the router). But i reckon you'd be better using both points to extract from, using a splitter(Y shape) to extract both above and below.I had the same problem with my TRA001 and cured it by moving the dust extraction from the fence and connecting underneath to the router body,
If I had no router at all I would probably get a 1400 watt Festool which I suspect would do everything I would need.
Ollie
I only own one festool tool and that wins the worst tool accolade by a mile for me, it is the xl700 domino and yes it cuts a nice hole for a domino but the quality of the machine is NOT outstanding when compared to say the dewalt biscuit joiner or many othertools, it is just comparable. Festool admits that the 700 is not always accurate because they have provided the sloppy setting, you dont drill a 10mm hole for a 6mm bolt to guarantee alignment. The dowelmax is much slower but way more accurate, I can place two rows of dowels along a length of wood and guarantee alignment, with dowels there is no room for error. Yes the domino can make nice holes to a set depth quickly but for me location, location, location is more important. With all the other festool products there are decent alternatives, but as yet not for the domino.
Hi Mike, could be the arrows but in this case the domino's are fine! There is something I am totally overlooking but no matter how many trials I do I cannot get to the bottom of it, the closest suggestion has been incompatability. Maybe it is a relationship that just does not work, me and the 700 don't get on and because I have had such a great one with the Dowelmax right out of the box I cannot get to grips with this domino.When an arrow consistently misses the bullseye, do you blame the bow or the archer?
Still have my elu 96 , several of my friends are constantly asking me to sell it but they got no chance . Festool agree good tools but far to expensive compared to trend , dewalt etc . I’ve got no issues paying for quality products and tools but festool and mayfell are too expensive and imo no better that the aforementioned brands .Why would anyone pay the best part of six hundred pounds for a 1400 watt 1/2 router when you can get a decent 2000 watt T10 for £230 which will do everything the T12 can apart from feeling different and people have been happy with the T10 / Dewalt 625 design ever since the Elu came to market.
In fact you could buy the Bosch GKF 600 Bosch GKF600 600W ¼ with a plunge base Bosch Professional TE 600 Plunge Base and the T10 for less than £600.
Don't fall into the festool trap, you pay a lot for the name and there are often equal or better products out there, for me my XL700 is my only Festool tool because no one else makes one and I still cannot get to grips with it so I still revert back to dowels.
Still have my elu 96 , several of my friends are constantly asking me to sell it but they got no chance . Festool agree good tools but far to expensive compared to trend , dewalt etc . I’ve got no issues paying for quality products and tools but festool and mayfell are too expensive and imo no better that the aforementioned brands .
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