I can't comment on the Woodpecker but do have some experience with the LS. OTT? Perhaps, depending on one's ability. My ability isn't that great and I've found the LS helps enormously for what others might find fairly routine routing operations. For example, I make photo frames and require a create to house the glass, photo and backing board. I'm still learning how to do this properly but if I find having cut rebates on all four sides the piece of glass is still a little bit bigger, it's a simple matter to do with the LS thanks to the multiple rulers you can slot into the positioner itself whereas with my previous set up (which looked a little like the Woodpecker but still cost less complete with table top and legs!) it was a case of marking the fence position with a pencil line on the table top either end, loosening both clamps, easing it by the required amount, re-tightening and checking, invariably repeating till confident then making the cut and finding it was either still too little or - worse! - too much. Bit more adventurous (for me, at least) I used it to create a kind of hunched mortise. I had to think it all through very carefully before starting it but to be honest not something I would even have attempted with my previous fence. And thanks to the aforementioned scales, it was an absolute doddle to go back to the start to make second and third passes with the bit heightened to make a deeper cut. I bought the Super version with the Wonderfence included but to be honest if I was buying again I'm not sure I'd bother with that for the following reasons. It adds quite a bit of bulk to the front which could be an issue if you haven't a long table top to work with. I wasn't too impressed with the dust extraction port, for one it didn't seem to fit any adaptor available on the UK market and that in turn might be why it didn't appear to extract much dust. That said, I introduced a Triton bucket to prevent clogging up a vacuum which may or may not be powerful / offer enough suction for this. I've got round that to some extent by removing the supplied port and covering the resulting hole with a piece of ply through which I fed the vacuum hose till the nozzle is pretty much level with the 'bit gap'. I've been working with some oak which sometimes comes off more like sting than chips or dust and these can get jammed between fence and table. That might be because I have the fence set slightly too high but perhaps no bad thing at my level of experience / ability to stop regularly to clear the working area. I was a bit concerned mine didn't appear to glide as effortlessly as it does for the demonstrator in the Incra demo videos but then I'm nowhere near as big as he is. There are a sequence of videos on Dieter Schmitt's Fine Tools site and I noticed his demonstrator required a two-handed approach too. I don't know if it's bedded in, been lubricated or just I've grown accustomed to it but I find it moves easier now, still not a glide exactly but no longer going purple in the face, either through exertion or from frustration of tap, tap, tapping trying to get a fence only for it to then shoot at least twice as far BEYOND the required mark.
All in, I'm very happy with it. Anything that helps a novice like me improve gets my vote. One that get's me thinking about other things I could possibly tackle with it and inspires me to try out new techniques is better still.