seng12 said:
the polisher came in with the backing plate already attached to the machine. all i did was stick the white pad to the velcro and went on polishing the car.
I understood that. What does not make sense to me is that you are writing off the tool without making sure whether that is necessary or not, whether it was really malfunctioning or not. Also, "going back to faithful PC until you find replacement for Festool" does not make sense to me either. First, it implies that Festool is not reliable so you need a replacement for it. Again, that can not be concluded from single alleged incident, especially not without knowing exact cause for it. Further more, I have re-read your post and now that I realize you were almost done with a car when it allegedly failed on you (few to several hours later?) I can not see how it could fail on you in a manner that was described. Two ways that I can see of that happening are:
a) Backing plate was not secured firmly enough.
If that was the cause was the first option, like we were speculating, then it should have happened almost immediately. When I fail to properly secure BP it comes undone just by hand twisting. In other words it would not take hours.
Or
b) Backing plate and/or mounting mechanism suffered mechanical failure.
As I am looking at backing plate and mounting mechanism of Festool in front of me I can not see how that could easily happen. Design seems to be such that even if one of teeth fails remaining two would take the load. All three would have to fail for bp to get free.
However, what I can see maybe happening is user switching from one mode to other without shutting down tool first.
Again, all of that together does not add up and make sense to me. Unless your mind is set on replacing Festool with Flex now that Flex is available.
Therefore I would be very interested to see some pictures of bp and mounting plate and to hear what Festool has to say on it for educational purposes if you are willing to humor us.