Chris Wong said:
Kev said:
I'll also maintain from my previous rants that the saw stop mechanism only protects people from what are essentially unsafe table saw usage methods anyway. Unsuspected kickback and flying offcuts are the real danger to people that do observe proper table saw safety and the Sawstop does NOTHING to deal with these issues ... what it does do is potentially lull the user into thinking they are "safe" ... so very wrong.
What about the well-designed blade guard/splitter with anti-kickback pawls and instructional owner's manual?
I pretty much agree with the sentiment you quoted.
As to the blade guard/splitter, those are fairly standard things fitted to saws these days.
Blade stopping offers a benefit, but kick back is not addressed in the same degree as afforded by Sliding table saws in the scenarios that I have found working on my ancient conventional saw that. And kick back is much harder to prevent by proper usage compared to actually running your hand into the blade.
I have not seen a blade stop saw that has a fence that can be set up so that the area beyond the saw blade is adjustable to prevent binding. Of course, you could mount a spacer to the fence that stops short of the blade.
The move to make blade stop technology mandatory would mean that Euro slider saws would be even more expensive and I think that slider's offer more protection than blade stopping does for more types of accidents. With a slider, I can be completely away from the blade with no reason to get anywhere near it in the first place and protect myself from the blade and work pieces flying through the air.
For my money, I would rather spend the money on a slider than blade stopping technology.
Both would be ideal, but since slider's cost a lot of money, and I think they are more important in stopping the kinds of accidents that I cannot prevent by carefully using push sticks and other safety equipment on a conventional saw without sliding, and a sliding saw offers the ability to clamp to a sliding table and to push at a point where you are nowhere near the blade or tossed work, I would choose sliding rather than blade stopping to improve my own safety and I resent any attempt to push sliding out of my reach by forcing stopping on sliding saws while not forcing sliding on blade stopping saws.
I would feel safer with a sliding saw than a blade stopping saw as I have experienced kick back but I have never come close to sticking my hand into the blade.
I currently use wheeled hold downs retrofitted to my ancient saw, and I use track saws when possible to relegate the table saw to as little work as possible. But I am pretty sure the slider would be more beneficial for me, my safety, and my work. I would need time with a slider to eliminate any equivocation I have on the subject.
I would think safety data on sliding saws vs non-sliding saws would be the ultimate way to determine which technology is more important to reducing the number and severity of accidents.