I thought this might be of interest to show. Recently had an employee test out the new SawStop.Luckily all he received was a nick on his finger. Surprisingly the blade was still usable.
The saw just paid for itself.
I thought this might be of interest to show. Recently had an employee test out the new SawStop.Luckily all he received was a nick on his finger. Surprisingly the blade was still usable.
The saw just paid for itself.
Awesome!!! Good to know that it held true to the promise! And yeah, it definitely just paid for itself many times over.
And I love it when people hates on Sawstop, and they say things such as "I very very careful, I don't need one of those things." or "I am so careful that I can pull my hand out of the way, before anything bad can happen"
And yes, sadly, they're serious.
Did you send the 'Save' in to Sawstop so they can post it on their site? IIRC, if you send the info in, they will send you a new brake cartridge.
Thanks for posting.
Great technology. The main issue now seems to be "false trips" which are costly/time consuming. I read an article on their own design of tablesaw which has a conductivity meter built in so that something like wet pressure treated wood can be tested ahead of a cut and a control limit "window" set so it doesn't false trip.
beakie,
I don't think "haters" are completely wrong in regards to safety issues though. The SS saves you on contact with the blade only.
It does nothing to prevent kick backs, pinching (riving knife on any saw helps remedy that) or other issues other than skin contact with the blade.


Need i say more?![]()
Nah, just be wasting words.
Okay, can't resist, the riving knife prevents kickback, 99% of thr time, just threw tha # out there, again, in ten nearly years, I've never even come close to a kickback. Can it happen? Sure! But the user would have to be negligent in selecting and/or prepping the wood to be cut, or purposely trying to cause a kickback. I suppose there are those people out there. But no technology can protect if someone is hellbent on being stupid.
And yeah, I'm glad guys like Gass are out there otherwise these types of innovations would never make it to market. They would be crushed by the huge manufacturers that want to do one thing. Maximize profits!
Look how long we lived with ****** blade guards, and half-arsed riving knives. None of that changed/improved until Sawstop hit the market, and the govt mandated change. Same with seat belts, anti lock brakes, air bags, fuel efficiency standards, and the list goes on and on. But you're probably against those too.
And why else would you need a braking syste, other than when contact with skin is made?
But back to the OPs intent of his post. Thank you for posting your experience OP. Much appreciated?

Why can't we just agree that this is a personal choice and shut up. It's as bad as the presidential primaries!![]()
you do know the whole story about that guy right? how he tried to force the gov. to mandate his technology (licensed by him of course) on every manufacturer out there, even though the market has continued to demonstrate that it is not desired by most/not enough demand to make it viable at all price points?
this has been debated so many times on other forums I won't say any more, but keep in mind, he is just as profit driven as every other business out there. If he was really this great inventor, trying to help mankind, he would have went about it completely differently.
Evidently, you didn't take time to research the whole story.
To some safety is paramount above everything else, and if being safe can save one from terrible accidents, I'm all for it. I've found that most regulations made mandatory usually require a degree of freedom be surrendered in the process. But when regulations under the presumption of safety imposes restrictions on a personal right, liberty or freedom, I begin to wonder if we are on a slippery slope. Safety is great as long as no government agency makes being personally safe mandatory, with punitive action if not followed, sorta like seat belts or motorcycle helmets. Big Brother is still with us everyday, and was it B. Franklin who said those surrendering precious freedom for a measure of temporary safety, deserve neither. Where do we draw the line? It should all come down to choice and personal consent. MHO

Cyberbear, If a driver is going down the road, and something causes that person to swerve, and lose control of the car, crashing into another car, bc he wasn't wearing a seat belt, therefore the seat belt couldn't keep the driver in the driver's seat even momentarily, then is the consequences/damages/suffering only limited to him? Then that person's choice to not wear the seat belt affects other people's lives. So if u could crash your car and you could somehow only limit the damage/pain and suffering or even death to yourself, then yeah feel free to cut that seatbelt right out of your car. But u cannot control that, so the govt mandates it. Btw, please wear your seatbelt, we like having you here.
When i was younger and dumber, i had a motorcycle, and rode without a helmet. Going down the highway at 70mph, a bumblebee flies right in front of me, and i get smacked right between the eyes with not a small bumblebee, but what seemed to be a full grown bumblebee the size of your thumb. Eyes immediately water, and its all I could do to keep it under control.
Now say I would have lost control and crashed into someone and killed their husband/wife/kid, just bc i thought it was an infringement on my right to ride without a helmet? When the potential for damage or loss of life doesn't only affect the primary person, but reaches out and damages or takes the life of another person, then it ceases to be a personal choice at that point. Your personal choice doesn't trump the lives of others.
The govt is not coming into your shop and mandating your personal shop practices, what they are mandating is, that the manufacturers must do what's necessary to ensure the tools available to you are as safe as possible. They are not mandating you have to purchase them, just that they are safe as current technology will allow. The govt could care less if you want to chop your fingers off, but they mandate safe tools for those of us that want to keep our fingers.
And Gass didn't go to the govt until the big tool manufacturers tried to quietly crush him, and brush it under the rug. Then they hired a lobbying group to fight the technology coming to market. I'm very glad Gass took the actions that he did. If he hadn't the OPs employee wouldbe minus 3 or 4 fingers. Instead he has the equivalent of a paper cut.
Ok. I agree, we're beating a dead horse. If after beating your head into a brick wall trying to get it to move, and the wall doesn't budge, well...then...we just have to let the brick wall alone and walk around it.![]()
Unfortunately, accidents happen when we least expect. So while there are others ways to protect your hands such as the blade guard, most people removed them bc the guards of the past sucked, and were often times were themselves unsafe. Many people would end up removing them. Thats another thing Sawstop did, was to redesign the blade guard so its actually usable/functional without being unsafe.
Like another has stated. 'I bought it because it was an amazingly well built saw. All the safety features are just bonuses.
Believing manufacturers to bring new innovative safety features to market, is like believing kids will do what they're supposed to do...without their parents telling them.
I thought this might be of interest to show. Recently had an employee test out the new SawStop.Luckily all he received was a nick on his finger. Surprisingly the blade was still usable.
The saw just paid for itself.
Oh, and I love your Chevelle! What are they called across the north border? I like that front panel design. Kinda gives it a 64 Lemans/GTO front end look.
4 speed Big Block?

But yes awesome ride! Great to see the Sawstop works as it should.I don't have a SawStop but there was one time I wish I had of had one. I was pushing a piece of wood through the saw and "accidently ran the blade of the saw into the tip of my finger. A SawStop saw would have been a cheaper investment that the hospital bill I received.
I would love to upgrade to a SawStop but my Unisaw just keeps on working. I think the tech is wonderful, I do wonder though if people with SawStops are doing stupid or more dangerous things than they normally would do because the expect the tech to work and save their fingers or hands.
As I downsize my shop, I certainly have my eye on the SawStop with the 36" fence instead of my Unisaw with the 50" fence, just to get a little more room here and there and in the shop. Maybe when the patent expires the prices will go down with competition.
Oh, and I love your Chevelle! What are they called across the north border? I like that front panel design. Kinda gives it a 64 Lemans/GTO front end look.
4 speed Big Block?
Many insurance companies are requiring businesses and schools to replace table saws with Sawstop, or lose coverage or face large premium increases.
If I ever upgrade my table saw it will be a Sawstop because it is a nice saw with a bonus safety feature.
Thanks for sharing that Kevin. Students especially need the technology. School shops are closing right and left, and when Jimmy cuts off a finger, that just closes the door to the school shop that much faster, bc of insurance premium increases, parents, school administration, liability etc.
Interesting. I work for the largest Workers' Comp insurer in the country, and I'm in the Safety Engineering side of the house. We've never required anyone to buy a Sawstop, nor am I aware of any competitors mandating a particular type of saw.
It's not a Chevelle. It's a Beaumont. A Canadian Pontiac...
Tommy
