Model A Fan
Well-known member
Re: Table-Saw Trouble: Let's Be Safe In 2016
Once a saw tastes blood, it prefers to cut nothing else. Careful.
Once a saw tastes blood, it prefers to cut nothing else. Careful.


I'm testing the idea of a big increase in aero -- since a track record for production cars was just set by a Dodge Viper ACR, which has a crazy-huge wing and splitter. I don't have the horsepower to push as much air as a Viper -- but I'm going to try a bit more wing in back, slightly different overall rake, and some other stuff up front. We'll see how it goes.
I can't help but think long term and dual-use. Is the door wide enough so that in ten years, you can roll your race tires in there for storage?
.
...

Do u have a pic of the garage before you done anything to it mate
And that brings up another point: while the Saw Stop is a fabulous invention, many other shop machines can do major harm. Why have that safety on just one? (I know, I hear the technology is being developed for other machines. But it's not as simple as instantly jamming a spinning blade with an aluminum chunk.)
To add my horror story to all the others- the last 3/8" of my ring finger was "severed" from the opposite side of the nail and held itself on pretty much almost only by the nail in a sporting accident 20 years ago, it re-attached and eventually had full finger tip feeling, maybe took 6-12 months in my case.
1) I know what I'm doing is stupid. But I figure I'll be lucky, like I have been my whole life.
It's easy to be dismissive of someone else's accident--thinking (like I used to) that if someone got into trouble with a power tool, it was because of stupidity and was certainly nothing that I needed to be concerned with. While that's often true, the fact is that familiarity breeds contempt and using a tool often can lead to a complacency that can be just as dangerous as inexperience. In my situation, I KNEW my cut was stupid, but I only needed to make just that one cut and doing it safely was just too time-consuming to bother with.
Everyone with a table saw and ten good fingers should take note.
You've just summed up every time that blood was spilled in my workshop. <sigh>

)

Speedy recovery, Jack.
About 137,000 new visitors came to the 12-gaugegarage.com website because of the parts store mailing. It overloaded the site and shut it down for about 10 hours. Now it's back.