What precipitated this forum topic was Ron Ketcham`s nomination for induction into the International Detailing Association Hall of Fame.
The reason is that Lake Country Power Tool`s Robert Eichelberg is an inductee into this IDA-HoF.
AND, that got me to thinking about the development of LC-PT User-Defined Orbital Strokes (UDOS) 51E buffing machine.
For historical reference, here are some threads from this forum about the development of this particular machine:
https://www.autopia.org/forums/mach...able-stroke-polishing-machine.html?highlight=
Lake Country`s new machine.....
My question is: Does anyone of you Autopians own and use the LCPT UDOS 51E machine? OR maybe more precisely, is anyone willing to confess they plunked down the big buck for this machine and are kinda forced to use it because the investment made in it?
Quite honestly, I still consider it an engineering marvel. I had this idea for such a machine MANY years ago, but like the perpetual motion machine, it was a great concept, but impossible to engineer and make into reality. The above thread links chronicle the development pains and the delayed (and more delayed) release of the working production model to be sold to the detailing customer.
And from what I have read online about it by those who did purchase it and use it made note of some of its negative characteristics like:
1) it was very heavy. Not something you like to use on vertical fender/door panels or front and rear fascias/bumpers.
2) having a one-size-does-all backing plate of 5"
3) the fact it is a corded electrical tool when cordless high-voltage battery-pack power tools for buffers are now available,
4) the high initial retail price for such a machine;
All of these characteristics made this buffer seem "market-challenged" when it came out.
I also know that many resellers dropped the price when it did not sell well (or at all) and the reviews given were not exactly "glowing".
Anyway, I am sure SOMEONE out there owns and uses this unique engineering marvel of a buffing machine and I (and I am sure others) would like to know your thoughts and opinions about using it and how you use it in your machine detailing correcting and polishing experiences. Quite frankly I am a hypocrite knocking this machine when I have not actual ever used it. I just want to know if the user-defined orbital stroke design outweigh the characteristics mentioned above. And I should applaud Lake Country Power Tools for even designing and bringing this buffing machine concept to market reality; something I thought was impossible to do.
The reason is that Lake Country Power Tool`s Robert Eichelberg is an inductee into this IDA-HoF.
AND, that got me to thinking about the development of LC-PT User-Defined Orbital Strokes (UDOS) 51E buffing machine.
For historical reference, here are some threads from this forum about the development of this particular machine:
https://www.autopia.org/forums/mach...able-stroke-polishing-machine.html?highlight=
Lake Country`s new machine.....
My question is: Does anyone of you Autopians own and use the LCPT UDOS 51E machine? OR maybe more precisely, is anyone willing to confess they plunked down the big buck for this machine and are kinda forced to use it because the investment made in it?
Quite honestly, I still consider it an engineering marvel. I had this idea for such a machine MANY years ago, but like the perpetual motion machine, it was a great concept, but impossible to engineer and make into reality. The above thread links chronicle the development pains and the delayed (and more delayed) release of the working production model to be sold to the detailing customer.
And from what I have read online about it by those who did purchase it and use it made note of some of its negative characteristics like:
1) it was very heavy. Not something you like to use on vertical fender/door panels or front and rear fascias/bumpers.
2) having a one-size-does-all backing plate of 5"
3) the fact it is a corded electrical tool when cordless high-voltage battery-pack power tools for buffers are now available,
4) the high initial retail price for such a machine;
All of these characteristics made this buffer seem "market-challenged" when it came out.
I also know that many resellers dropped the price when it did not sell well (or at all) and the reviews given were not exactly "glowing".
Anyway, I am sure SOMEONE out there owns and uses this unique engineering marvel of a buffing machine and I (and I am sure others) would like to know your thoughts and opinions about using it and how you use it in your machine detailing correcting and polishing experiences. Quite frankly I am a hypocrite knocking this machine when I have not actual ever used it. I just want to know if the user-defined orbital stroke design outweigh the characteristics mentioned above. And I should applaud Lake Country Power Tools for even designing and bringing this buffing machine concept to market reality; something I thought was impossible to do.