Woodbloke,
great skiing, how long did it take to recover ??? :lol:
We do look after our tools and I am sure we are connecting them up correctly. We even had a sales rep from Festool come out once and check everything himself. We are, however, a workshop and things are used on a dialy basis. The sanders are the worst although our don't come loose, they just burn the points out.
Most festool comes with a standard 13a plug one end and a 'plug-it' connector on the other. The idea is that the cable can be plugged into other festool tools at the tool end so you just use one cable for many tools. The idea keeps the workshop tidy ! But is Nearly always faulty.
I just had a chat with a guy in a tool service department in an independant tool shop. He said someone started legal procedings against festool for this cable issue but Festool won by saying all cables should be suspended from the ceiling and not hung over the edge of a workbench or table and that this is what was causing the faults. If the cables were susspended from the ceiling, the cable would not become faulty !
THAT'S NOTCRICKET !! I don't dis-agree that having a cable suspended over the workbench is cleaner and probably less prone to getting court on things but come on !
I was told of one chap who bought a Kapex (over £1000) chop saw only to have the motor fail after 2 years. They wanted £700 to fix it and would not offer any good will as it was out of warranty. ! They would not even let him have the parts at trade price, he had to pay RRP ! He told them to put it in the skip. That's customer service for you. !
My Dewalt saw is over 5 years old and we hardly molly coddled it, that has never missed a beat !
I think after our current Festool tools wear out, I will buy other brands to replace them. Festool will learn in the long run when no-one wants their tools and they are over priced and the customer service does not back the price up. It's a shame, when they work, they're un-beatable.