As I said in the review, "For mid-range tasks, it will be a very effective machine. It will never replace the more powerful model..."dedee":3tlsd30y said:At less than half the price of the Trend T10/T11 how does the Triton compare against them? I've always understand that the Triton is designed for inverted table use but does the 600w power difference have a large impact on usefulness?
The template guides are Imperial, in fact they're the same as the TGA001 kit, which includes a mounting plate, a spacer ring (to raise the standard guides for through-table use) and an alignment bush (which also enables the use of Porter Cable® style bushes). The seven bush sizes are:Neil":2cpye3sq said:A couple of questions if you don't mind:
- are the template guides metric or imperial?
- You gave the travel for one turn of the fine height adjuster in metric, with imperial equivalent. Just to make sure - does the adjuster actually have a metric thread, or is it an imperial thread which corresponds to 2mm/turn?
Thanks,
Neil
Argee":149sqwg3 said:However, if comparing on pricing, I'll admit that I was foolish enough to buy a "Trend" T-Tech 2050W from B&Q because of the price. OK, I was in a bit of a hurry and needed something that would take a particular base, plus it had the name "Trend" on it, but what a POS that router is. I've no idea why Trend would put their name on it, as it's really dire. OK, so the MOF001 wasn't available then, but now - for a few quid more, it's a complete no-brainer!
Ray.
Argee":2npksn14 said:I'll admit that I was foolish enough to buy a "Trend" T-Tech 2050W from B&Q because of the price.
Argee":kclx1xh0 said:If comparing the new Triton to other routers of similar power, I think Festool do one that's over £300 and whilst it may be the mutt's nuts, it's still only 1400W. I'd want a bit more grunt for that price, because it would definitely be going under a table as well.
Absolutely - I should have known that a Festool would justify the outlay! I wasn't prepared to spend quite that much on what appears to be a medium-powered tool, but from what you say it looks to be well worth it.johnelliott":w1qvkp9m said:For the next worktop job (and all those after) I have used the Festool, and it works just fine. It's at least as powerful as any 1800-2000 watt router I've tried.
I suppose it all depends on whose watts they are
John
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