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  1. #1
    Holden_C04's Avatar
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    I have decided to purchase a new rotary but I am pretty picky. I want a rotary polisher that is lightweight, reliable, and powerful and must provide a trigger (NO on/off switch). I am considering the following models:



    Makita 9227c



    Pros - Light, powerful, reliable



    Cons - Jack of all trades, master of none (good in all categories but leader in none).



    This is the logical choice but I would prefer something a bit more exotic. The Makita is a good fall-back, safe choice.



    Flex L 3403 VRG



    Pros - Extremely light, high RPM (3400), German :up



    Cons - Weak transmission?



    I am worried this unit will be unreliable or unfit for a daily workload.



    Flex LK603VVB



    Pros - Heavy duty, powerful, reliable



    Cons - EXTREMELY heavy



    I do not want a heavy polisher.



    Hitachi SP18VA



    Pros - Very light, powerful, good warranty



    Cons - Unreliable



    Want something more reliable.



    Metabo PE-12 175



    Pros - Very light, powerful, German :up



    Cons - On/off switch :hairpull, low rpms (2200)



    An on/off switch rules this polisher out.







    What does everyone else think? Is the Flex lightweight polisher tough enough for the daily grind? Is there a polisher I have not yet considered (Dewalt is too heavy)?

  2. #2
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    Since I just got mine about a month ago, I have to vote for the 3403. I`ve seen alot of people say that the thing has a week transmission and to not use large pads with it, but I haven`t seen anything put out by Flex saying to use smaller pads. Mine feels like it has all the power you`d ever need. I mentioned this in another post (or two), but I`ll add it again... The Flex seemed to have a break in period. During about the firsty 50 or so hours, it got very hot. Not hot enough to actually shut down, but darn good and warm. It was also very noisy above 1.2k rpm. Now it doesn`t get nearly as hot, and it`s not as noisy, either. I think it was just the break in on the new gears. Up until now, I`ve been using it almost forty hours a week, so probably about 160 hours worth or so. It has never had a thermal shutdown in spite of a few ten hour days. And I was pretty happy about the light weight on those ten hour days.
    Sage advice from Greg Nichols: "Hey, Supe? When you`re trying to get the air bubble out of your syringe of Opti-Coat, don`t point it at your face, mmmkay?"

  3. #3
    Holden_C04's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by SuperBee364
    Since I just got mine about a month ago, I have to vote for the 3403. I`ve seen alot of people say that the thing has a week transmission and to not use large pads with it, but I haven`t seen anything put out by Flex saying to use smaller pads. Mine feels like it has all the power you`d ever need. I mentioned this in another post (or two), but I`ll add it again... The Flex seemed to have a break in period. During about the firsty 50 or so hours, it got very hot. Not hot enough to actually shut down, but darn good and warm. It was also very noisy above 1.2k rpm. Now it doesn`t get nearly as hot, and it`s not as noisy, either. I think it was just the break in on the new gears. Up until now, I`ve been using it almost forty hours a week, so probably about 160 hours worth or so. It has never had a thermal shutdown in spite of a few ten hour days. And I was pretty happy about the light weight on those ten hour days.


    I am pleased to hear that. Thank you for the wonderful review. It`s been what I have been looking for. :thx



    Are there any polishers I should be considering that are not listed?

  4. #4

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    I`m not a pro, but what about Festool? It`s German

  5. #5
    Holden_C04's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Domas
    I`m not a pro, but what about Festool? It`s German


    Difficult to find information on this machine and the price is about $600 in UK & Australia. :shocked



    I will continue looking, though.

  6. #6

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    Why rule out the Metabo? The low starting RPM negates the need for a trigger. Furthermore you don`t need more than 2200 RPM for rotary polishing any way it goes.



    I have a Metabo, it`s well built and has a safety start which starts off slow and then gets to speed after a few seconds.

  7. #7
    Holden_C04's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Domas
    I`m not a pro, but what about Festool? It`s German






    This machine is particularly economical because of its high coverage capacity - ideal for those who have their work cut out. Without a stepless speed preselector and accelerator switch, you`ll be hard pushed to finish your work as quickly. Optimised cooling and high load capacity.



    Features:

    - Ergonomic dome grip and perfect weight distribution for relaxed work

    - Accelerator switch, speed preselection, controlled speed, smooth start-up

    - Temperature-dependent overload protection

    - Polishing differnet surfaces: paintwork, mineral materials, etc.



    Applications:

    - Ergonomic dome grip and perfect weight distribution for relaxed work

    - Accelerator switch, speed preselection, controlled speed, smooth start-up

    - Temperature- dependent overload protection

    - Polshing pad changing without tools thanks to spindle stop

    - PoliStick system

    - Exceptional cooling in lower speed range- allows work under heavy loads



    Specifications:

    Power consumption - 1500w

    Speed - 800 to 2400min-Ă‚¹

    Maximum polishing pad diameter - 180mm

    Spindle thread - M14

    Weight - 3.6kg

  8. #8

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    I have the Metabo and it starts up almost instantly. My Flex doesn`t seem to have a week transmission. What about the DeWalt 849? The 849 may be a little on the heavy side, but it`s built like a tank and will last a very long time.
    If you do not change what your doing today, tomorrow will be no different.

  9. #9

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  10. #10

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    And AEG PE 150 (AEG is a very good German brand).

    AEG Elektrowerkzeuge




  11. #11
    Holden_C04's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Domas
    And AEG PE 150 (AEG is a very good German brand).

    AEG Elektrowerkzeuge





    I like. :shocked









    No North American distributors. :sadpace:

  12. #12

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    Quote Originally Posted by Holden_C04
    I like. :shocked
    Yeah, looks great quality to me too, but I`m not sure there is a distributor in US... In Europe it costs approx. $420, but if there is a distributor in US, I`m sure it will be so much cheaper.

  13. #13

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    Quote Originally Posted by Holden_C04

    No North American distributors. :sadpace:
    Sorry, haven`t noticed...

    You can always order from Europe and buy a power transformer

    (that`s what I did for my UDM).

  14. #14
    Holden_C04's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JonP
    I have the Metabo and it starts up almost instantly. My Flex doesn`t seem to have a week transmission. What about the DeWalt 849? The 849 may be a little on the heavy side, but it`s built like a tank and will last a very long time.


    Good to hear about the Flex. I am seeking a light polisher as my number one requirement so that rules out the Dewalt.

  15. #15
    Holden_C04's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Domas
    Sorry, haven`t noticed...

    You can always order from Europe and buy a power transformer

    (that`s what I did for my UDM).


    On the German Amazon.com, the AEG PE 150 rotary polisher is 320 euros. :spit:

 

 
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