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Ronin47
09-28-2017, 02:54 PM
Good News!

I have been informed that both my Mille DLX and LH19E STN kits have been shipped after a lengthy wait and having paid for them in July already. I can’t wait to put them to the test individually and against all my other polishers. Also, I have already used Rupes new MF and Wool pads but will reserve judgement till I try them out on these new polishers.

atgonzales
09-28-2017, 03:09 PM
Review please and PICS....

Ronin47
09-28-2017, 03:36 PM
Review please and PICS....

I will do so but please allow a week for delivery and another week to test on a variety of paints so as to conclude with facts and accuracy. I will also be comparing Rupes Blue and Yellow compounds of which there are three different types now, long throw Zephir Blue, Keramik Yellow, Mille Blue Coarse, Yellow Fine Compound, Rotary Coarse and Fine Compounds across all polishers. Yes will compare the new foam,mf and wool pads and try them across the different Rupes polishers too.

DaveT435
09-28-2017, 03:40 PM
Cool, both these machines have me interested...

Ronin47
09-28-2017, 04:31 PM
Cool, both these machines have me interested...

Global demand for both has exceeded expectations and they selling faster than they can make them. Everyone is either out of stock or awaiting stock with waiting lists well into 2018. This is from a few retailers based on preorders.

DaveT435
09-28-2017, 04:35 PM
Global demand for both has exceeded expectations and they selling faster than they can make them. Everyone is either out of stock or awaiting stock with waiting lists well into 2018. This is from a few retailers based on preorders.


Wow, Obviously it will be 2018 before I see them. Good thing it's a want not a need lol

Ronin47
10-11-2017, 02:33 PM
Quick update, first impressions of the Mille and LH19E are very positive.

brettS4
10-11-2017, 03:17 PM
Very interested in the Mille compared to the 3401. Any comparison likely?

Ronin47
10-11-2017, 04:10 PM
Very interested in the Mille compared to the 3401. Any comparison likely?

I have 2 x 3401’s with all bp options, tested against Mille with just the 5” bp as its a real pain to swop bp’s, 6 screws and aligning the gasket is no quick task. To swop bp’s on the 3401 is quick and easy, on the Mille its like they want you to keep the 5” on which I actually prefer anyways and will keep the 6” in the box.

brettS4
10-11-2017, 05:52 PM
I'd keep the 5" BP on the Mille too, but it's good to know the difference in the machines.

How about ergonomics, balance, smoothness and power compared to 3401?

And is the Mille compatible with LC, B&S or Griots pads?

Ronin47
10-11-2017, 06:24 PM
I'd keep the 5" BP on the Mille too, but it's good to know the difference in the machines.

How about ergonomics, balance, smoothness and power compared to 3401?

And is the Mille compatible with LC, B&S or Griots pads?

Good questions and I can only answer as honestly or truthfully with the limited time I have spent with it so my evaluation thus far is based on limited experience with it. I will have the machines up against each other on hard paint in a couple of hours but for now I will comment on correction done on soft to medium paints.

From the first time you hold the Mille in your hands to the first time you power it up and do your first section pass you begin to realise alot of thought, engineering and attention to detail has gone into making this polisher. It feels lighter than the 3401, as well as more balanced. Even the speed dial has an expensive feel and click to the different speed settings. The polisher is noticeably quieter and much cooler running than the 3401. Using the 3401 and Mille side by side you can feel the difference in vibration when going back to the 3401. The Mille doesn’t wobble as such and feels very well thought out, sophisticated and much newer.

Throughout the speed settings you can see it has more rpm at every setting and doesn’t walk nearly as much as the 3401 either. However if the pads not perfectly centred I found the Mille to be a handful to control so much so that I had to switch off and figure out why that happened. I have used many types of non Rupes pads on it as I have alot of them and donot intend investing in all new pads specefic to the Mille anytime soon. Having said that I find the intended Rupes pads or thinner pads to feel more natural which is the opposite of what we are led to believe gear driven polishers prefer.

Yes its sleeker,fancier than the ageing 3401 ofcourse, yes its smoother, quieter, and runs a heck of alot cooler too but bare in mind theres a decade technology difference between them, 2007 3401 vs 2017 Mille, was never gona be a fair fight at all.

Lastly correction..., the Mille is definitely the more powerful tool and faster correcting of the two, theres no second guessing that, it is what it is. I had to drop to speed 3 on the Mille where the Flex needed speed 5 and then too the Mille still had the edge. I used the same pads and compounds to keep things fair and at one point even put the more aggressive pad on the 3401 and then too the Mille was still correcting faster.

I hope this answers your question, also I will update again soon on hard paints and then know for certain.

brettS4
10-11-2017, 06:31 PM
That's a huge help! Yes, it's not fair to put a new model up against a 10 year old design. But FLEX has nobody to blame but themselves. They started to talk up their XCE two years ago but even if they released it today they'd still be in second place.

Looks like I'll be saving up for a Mille. I'll be able to afford one about the same time they're readily available. My only concern is how well it might cooperate with ThinPro or Boss pads.

BudgetPlan1
10-11-2017, 07:19 PM
... Rupes Blue and Yellow compounds of which there are three different types now, long throw Zephir Blue, Keramik Yellow, Mille Blue Coarse, Yellow Fine Compound, Rotary Coarse and Fine Compounds across all polishers.

Geez, they hire Menzerna's marketing dept or something?

kkritsilas
10-11-2017, 08:00 PM
.......They started to talk up their XCE two years ago but even if they released it today they'd still be in second place.......


May I ask how you come to that conclusion? Considering that the XCE has been talked about ONLY, unless you have actually been able to use the Mille and the rumored XCE, this statement is noting more than speculation.

The Makinta PO5000C was supposed to put the XC 3401 into the history books. It was supposed to be much faster at correcting paint, much smoother, and was dual mode (free rotation and geared rotation). When the machine actually arrived, the free rotation mode was found to be not very useful. It was smoother, but it corrected paint only marginally faster. In return, you had a machine that was somewhat faster, but not significantly so (it would take the XC3401 one section pass more to get the same correction), when the pads and compounds were identical, on identical panel surfaces). When it was announced, it spun in the same direction as a rotary; when the polisher actually arrived, it didn't; it spun in the same direction as the XC3401. All this is to say, that what you end up in your hands may not always be what is "said" or :rumored" to be the case, isn't. Having said all of that, please let us all know how you came to the conclusion that a polisher that as of yet, only exists as either a prototype, or in a lab in Germany, will be better or worse than any existing polisher (XC3401, PO500C, Mille, or any other geared rotation polisher)? Or is this just the "its a Rupes, so it is better than everything else" sort of statement?

VISITOR
10-11-2017, 08:29 PM
May I ask how you come to that conclusion? Considering that the XCE has been talked about ONLY, unless you have actually been able to use the Mille and the rumored XCE, this statement is noting more than spectualtion.

The Makinta PO5000C was supposed to put the XC 3401 into the history books. It was supposed to be much faster at correcting paint, much smoother, and was dual mode (free rotation and geared rotation). When the machine actually arrived, the free rotation mode was found to be not very useful. It was smoother, but it corrected paint only marginally faster. In return, you had a machine that was somewhat faster, but not significantly so (it would take the XC3401 one section pass more to get the same correction, when the pads and compounds were identical, on identical panel surfaces). When it was announced, it spun in the same direction as a rootary; when the polisher actually arrived, it didn't; it spun in the same direction as the XC340. All this is to say, that what you end up in your hands may not always be what is "said" or :rumored" to be the case, isn't. Having said all of that, please let us all know how you came to the conclusion that a polisher that as of yet, only exists as either a prototype, or in a lab in Germany, will be better or worse than any existing polisher (XC3401, PO500C, Mille, or any other geared rotation polisher)? Or is this just the "its a Rupes, so it is better than everything else" sort of statement?

the flex has been around a long time and for good reason. it's built like a tank (versatile with different backing plates as well) and it's proven itself for many years. there's going to be different opinions about any machine and it comes down to the user finding what they may or may not like about it, as you mentioned with the makita which was/is suppose to be better...