A few more things...
All metal design (as opposed to plastic), larger tip range, USA made (not outsourced), can fully hot swap the cartridges without cooling, config is hidden at boot (no accidents), calibration free design, cool running handpiece, intuitive buttons, heavy stand, cheap consumables, comes with silicon pad and tip tool, station will run their nice (but a bit pricey) tweezers. Handpiece compatibility with other Accudrive stations.
Free integrated heater inside every cartridge brought (hehe). But yeah you have to consider there is an extra cost that comes with the integration of the heater and tip.
Shock, I love the enthusiasm but to be somewhat objective
.....
All metal design (as opposed to plastic) - looks good, sounds good, but the FX888D is plenty durable (although it's still blue and yellow); btw/fwiw, the FX888D is slightly taller (16mm, 120mm vs 104mm) but the FX888D has a smaller footprint than the ADS200 (100mm vs 130mm width and 120mm vs 152mm depth) = about 40% smaller footprint for the FX888D
larger tip range - this might be debatable, look at the collection of tips for the FX888D, in some shapes/sizes Hakko might offer more choices
USA made (not outsourced) - that is a bonus for people in the U.S.
can fully hot swap the cartridges without cooling - it can hot swap with a tool; with my 1960s pliers I can hot swap a tip on the FX888D, probably not as easily but once you get the process down you don't have to wait to swap tips
config is hidden at boot (no accidents) - not sure how many people if any have ever had a boot accident with FX888D
calibration free design - good if you don't need or want to calibrate but maybe nice if you needed to or wanted to
cool running handpiece - I haven't found this to be an issue with the FX888D
intuitive buttons - ok, no one is going to give this one to Hakko but it's also not that big of a deal once you know how it works
heavy stand - the FX888D stand is plenty heavy (but it's blue and yellow)
cheap consumables - not sure what consumables really matter but FX888D tips are about 1/3 the price of ADS200 tips
comes with silicon pad and tip tool - how much are those worth? get a pad and a pliers
station will run their nice (but a bit pricey) tweezers - might be interesting if you need a tweezers
Handpiece compatibility with other Accudrive stations - always good when handpieces are compatible with stations
Net, net: These are somewhere between a push and not really advantages and maybe some disadvantages, and a few modest value adds. Meanwhile the price is 3-4x.
But, despite all that, for someone who is a pro and solders a lot where time is real money, or maybe for an amateur who works on valuable equipment, or for an enthusiast who just really enjoys soldering, or for someone who is maybe a TEA member - then the ADS200 makes sense.
Having said that, before I admit to a possible TEA affiliation, how do we deal with these?
https://youtu.be/42sa3wkQUIE- 5 years later and the only explanation is faulty tips?
- given the comments, seems like it wasn't just Mike, others apparently had similar issues
https://youtu.be/TGaTJmuy21U- this was only a year ago, and from the comments it also appears that it wasn't just the reviewer who was underwhelmed
Shock, you are a great Ambassador for Pace, and I'd kind of like to give the ADS200 a try but between the price and the issues, to be square, if it wasn't for you and your never ending Pace PR I might have moved on to something else by now. So give us your best closing argument.
Thanks, EF