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Frank Pratt
03-11-2022, 3:05 PM
There has been a bit of commotion on another SawStop thread that has since been deleted. I saw this today and it's related. I don't want to mess up the thread that's going now, so here it is. :)

https://scontent.fyyc7-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/275694909_2475756665893950_3768129783737528965_n.j pg?_nc_cat=104&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=5cd70e&_nc_ohc=RE8UytfRkdgAX_uNdfg&_nc_ht=scontent.fyyc7-1.fna&oh=00_AT9WvDWGULPO06ibNtbLT7_V1QnIXoHw8Ijq3P0R-B9Pxg&oe=62301DE3

Eric Cothern
03-11-2022, 3:08 PM
The same who don't know the difference between then and than. 😋

Cory Newman
03-11-2022, 3:16 PM
Related to the other thread, has Stumpy Nubs come out with a video defending saw stop yet? Similar to the Harvey miter gauge video?:)

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 3:32 PM
Study up on Physics/Inertia concepts & then ask yourself how your finger would look with very high RPM's of a table saw, even with super fast shutdown. So it did not get completely cut off, it just got torn up & will require surgery and will never be the same. All around us, marketing sales are pounded towards us, using the State of Fear. Watch these television ads for "safety" products. If you are unable to focus on a particular day, wait to use power tools until you are able to focus. Do not let fear control your life good people of SMC.

mike stenson
03-11-2022, 3:37 PM
I've known too many people missing parts of digits, mostly in the trades. But hey, being afraid of fear seems to be a thing the days.

I also know a couple people who have used their sawstop.

Bert McMahan
03-11-2022, 3:48 PM
Sawstops are silly. As long as you always pay attention you have nothing to fear. Same reason I never wear my seatbelt, it's just fearmongering. As long as I'm a safe driver I'm totally fine. Same with shoes- don't want to hurt your feet? Try not stepping on sharp things! Bike helmets? Easy, just don't fall off your bike. :D

Sawstops absolutely don't leave your finger mangled and needing surgery. They save fingers, pure and simple. They stop crazy fast. "Look up inertia" doesn't begin to describe what's going on. It's a tool to prevent accidents, just like a push stick, safety glasses, GFCI outlets, crumple zones in cars, etc. Your assertion that they aren't very helpful in saving a finger is extremely ignorant of how the Sawstop works. Nobody is forcing you to get a Sawstop or even trying to convince you to buy one. You don't have to try to slam people on the internet that want to be extra safe. Let people buy what they want.

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 3:50 PM
I've known too many people missing parts of digits, mostly in the trades. But hey, being afraid of fear seems to be a thing the days.

I also know a couple people who have used their sawstop. Most power tools can cause damage if someone is not careful. Saw a guy cut his top part of finger off on a bandsaw in high school woodshop, pick it up & laugh. He got it re-attached. Moral of story ? Do not use LSD while using the band saw lol or any other power tool. With the blade guards,etc on most modern power saws, someone would really have to be creative to cut their finger off. Push blocks/sticks, use safety = no problem. Wish everyone safety, be responsible.

Dennis Jarchow
03-11-2022, 4:09 PM
I have been considering buying a new table saw this spring and never really considered the Sawstop because of the price jump from other comparable saws. I have always been careful with all my saws and after 30 years of using them didn't see the need for the brake tech. Recently I was cutting a return for small panel molding on my chop saw and after the cut reached over to grab the piece. Then I saw drops of blood on the saw and realized my left index finger had just skimmed the blade as I was raising it up. I never even felt it. It just needed a band-aid but that made me rethink how easily something can go wrong. I don't think I was tired or distracted, I just reached for the piece a quarter second sooner than I normally did. So, while it still burns my backside to have to pay double the price from a Harvey Alpha to get a PCS with the brake tech I probably will.

Andrew Hughes
03-11-2022, 4:13 PM
It’s a awful lot of money for tablesaw that only spins a 10 inch blade. How much are they now 4 or 5 thousand dollars

Zachary Hoyt
03-11-2022, 4:16 PM
I can see a reasonable argument either way. I will never buy a SawStop myself, but I can see that there are situations in which they are better. I don't use a table saw all the time, so chances are if I get injured it will be by another tool. If I could pay double and protect myself from all risk of serious injury in the shop it would be worth it, but I don't see that happening.

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 5:24 PM
I have been considering buying a new table saw this spring and never really considered the Sawstop because of the price jump from other comparable saws. I have always been careful with all my saws and after 30 years of using them didn't see the need for the brake tech. Recently I was cutting a return for small panel molding on my chop saw and after the cut reached over to grab the piece. Then I saw drops of blood on the saw and realized my left index finger had just skimmed the blade as I was raising it up. I never even felt it. It just needed a band-aid but that made me rethink how easily something can go wrong. I don't think I was tired or distracted, I just reached for the piece a quarter second sooner than I normally did. So, while it still burns my backside to have to pay double the price from a Harvey Alpha to get a PCS with the brake tech I probably will.


Hello Dennis, A Saw Stop saw would have not prevented what happened to you - you would have been out the cost of your blade & $90 brake, plus time & labor re-installing both. For marginally a little more $, you can buy a real saw, not made in China, a Hammer K3 Winner. Look into that, I believe you will be very satisfied with your decision if you go with a Hammer K3.

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 5:35 PM
Sawstops are silly. As long as you always pay attention you have nothing to fear. Same reason I never wear my seatbelt, it's just fearmongering. As long as I'm a safe driver I'm totally fine. Same with shoes- don't want to hurt your feet? Try not stepping on sharp things! Bike helmets? Easy, just don't fall off your bike. :D

Sawstops absolutely don't leave your finger mangled and needing surgery. They save fingers, pure and simple. They stop crazy fast. "Look up inertia" doesn't begin to describe what's going on. It's a tool to prevent accidents, just like a push stick, safety glasses, GFCI outlets, crumple zones in cars, etc. Your assertion that they aren't very helpful in saving a finger is extremely ignorant of how the Sawstop works. Nobody is forcing you to get a Sawstop or even trying to convince you to buy one. You don't have to try to slam people on the internet that want to be extra safe. Let people buy what they want.


Hello Bert, You are simply incorrect - I slammed nobody - if you or others chose to buy one, no problem - it is your $. But I have read peoples comments who have got their finger in there = it does not "prevent" any accident, it limits damage somewhat. A table saw blade is typically very sharp & at that RPM, damage will occur, even with so-called "instant stop". I personally do not see the value there at all on price of Saw Stop, a much superior Hammer K3 winner sliding saw could be had for not much more. Even with a Saw Stop, recommending absolute complete focus & care at all times when saw is on, is not "slamming".

Phil Gaudio
03-11-2022, 5:39 PM
Hello Dennis, A Saw Stop saw would have not prevented what happened to you - you would have been out the cost of your blade & $90 brake, plus time & labor re-installing both. For marginally a little more $, you can buy a real saw, not made in China, a Hammer K3 Winner. Look into that, I believe you will be very satisfied with your decision if you go with a Hammer K3.

Given the same situation when using the TS, the Sawstop would most certainly have come into play. My Sawstop was made in Taiwan, not China, so significant difference there. Since TTS Holdings of Germany bought it out in 2017, I don't know where they are currently manufactured. I have no regrets about my SS purchase. I triggered the cartridge once when the blade contacted the miter gauge fence: I had to spend a lot of time and use a magnifying glass to see where the contact occurred. It is an amazing piece of technology and in my opinion is well worth the investment. It is an excellent saw and is every bit as good as some Minimax equipment in my shop. Not sure why a number of folks are "anti-sawstop"?

Dan Friedrichs
03-11-2022, 6:10 PM
It’s a awful lot of money for tablesaw that only spins a 10 inch blade. How much are they now 4 or 5 thousand dollars

The PCS with 3HP motor and 52" fence is $3500. With shorter fence and smaller motor (but still a proper cabinet saw) it can be had for $2700.

Considering that a new Unisaw is $4300, or a new Powermatic is $4900, or even a Grizzly is $3k, the SS seems like quite the value. (*comparing 3HP, 52" models)

J.R. Rutter
03-11-2022, 6:10 PM
Study up on Physics/Inertia concepts & then ask yourself how your finger would look with very high RPM's of a table saw, even with super fast shutdown. So it did not get completely cut off, it just got torn up & will require surgery and will never be the same. All around us, marketing sales are pounded towards us, using the State of Fear. Watch these television ads for "safety" products. If you are unable to focus on a particular day, wait to use power tools until you are able to focus. Do not let fear control your life good people of SMC.

Not in my case. Didn't even draw blood. Doing this stuff for a living, I don't have the luxury of waiting...

Bert McMahan
03-11-2022, 6:27 PM
Hello Bert, You are simply incorrect - I slammed nobody - if you or others chose to buy one, no problem - it is your $. But I have read peoples comments who have got their finger in there = it does not "prevent" any accident, it limits damage somewhat. A table saw blade is typically very sharp & at that RPM, damage will occur, even with so-called "instant stop". I personally do not see the value there at all on price of Saw Stop, a much superior Hammer K3 winner sliding saw could be had for not much more. Even with a Saw Stop, recommending absolute complete focus & care at all times when saw is on, is not "slamming".

It limits damage in a massive, massive way for a whole lot of accidents. It doesn't just slightly lower the amount of injury you'll get. Look at the high speed videos out there. Sharp blades at high RPM will do damage... but the blade stops in something like 3 teeth moving past your finger. If you slap it like you're playing whack-a-mole you might get a lot of damage cut, but you're really over-minimizing how much of an effect the blade stopper can have for, say, a kickback causing your hand to pull into the blade. It turns a "cut your finger off" accident into a "get some stitches and Tylenol" accident. Studies have shown this to be true: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4154236/ There are more than 30,000 table saw accidents annually. Most of them are finger or thumb injuries, which are likely to be caused by blade contact (as opposed to a kickback, which Sawstops don't help with). The mean age of an occupational injury was 40 years. Assuming someone's been working in that career since they were in their 20's, that means the average table saw injury happened to someone with 15-20 years of experience.

Regarding "slamming" someone- your first post erroneously says that the SS won't prevent much damage in a tone that clearly implies that anyone who thinks otherwise simply isn't thinking about it enough. "Do not let fear control your life"- clearly, in the context of your post, you're saying anyone who buys a Sawstop is just letting marketing speak and fear control their lives. In your next post you say "You can get a real saw", which is clearly again an insult to anyone who likes their Sawstop. If someone said about your car "Well, if you get a real car, then..." or "Well, if you were a real parent, you'd..." That's what I call slamming. You might not be meaning it that way (since of course you can't convey much emotion through text) but that's what the words say. Consider how you'd feel if someone said that about you. Would you feel insulted?

No, I'm not sponsored by Sawstop or anything. The only one I've used is at my local Woodcraft for classes and it seems to work fine and is a well made saw. I use a slider at home.

Not to mention a Hammer K3 Winner, while definitely a great saw, is $5700 minimum, whereas a Sawstop is about 4k. A 40% higher cost isn't anything to sneeze at.

Last- I fully agree you should have complete focus 100% of the time you're operating a tool. A Sawstop is not a reason to be sloppy. It's a "belt and suspenders" system that helps if you have a momentary lapse of judgement or if something kicks a weird way. In that regard it's similar to a blade guard. If you were 100% focused at all times you don't need a blade guard... but we're not robots here, we're people, and sometimes we make mistakes.

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 7:03 PM
It limits damage in a massive, massive way for a whole lot of accidents. It doesn't just slightly lower the amount of injury you'll get. Look at the high speed videos out there. Sharp blades at high RPM will do damage... but the blade stops in something like 3 teeth moving past your finger. If you slap it like you're playing whack-a-mole you might get a lot of damage cut, but you're really over-minimizing how much of an effect the blade stopper can have for, say, a kickback causing your hand to pull into the blade. It turns a "cut your finger off" accident into a "get some stitches and Tylenol" accident. Studies have shown this to be true: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4154236/ There are more than 30,000 table saw accidents annually. Most of them are finger or thumb injuries, which are likely to be caused by blade contact (as opposed to a kickback, which Sawstops don't help with). The mean age of an occupational injury was 40 years. Assuming someone's been working in that career since they were in their 20's, that means the average table saw injury happened to someone with 15-20 years of experience.

Regarding "slamming" someone- your first post erroneously says that the SS won't prevent much damage in a tone that clearly implies that anyone who thinks otherwise simply isn't thinking about it enough. "Do not let fear control your life"- clearly, in the context of your post, you're saying anyone who buys a Sawstop is just letting marketing speak and fear control their lives. In your next post you say "You can get a real saw", which is clearly again an insult to anyone who likes their Sawstop. If someone said about your car "Well, if you get a real car, then..." or "Well, if you were a real parent, you'd..." That's what I call slamming. You might not be meaning it that way (since of course you can't convey much emotion through text) but that's what the words say. Consider how you'd feel if someone said that about you. Would you feel insulted?

No, I'm not sponsored by Sawstop or anything. The only one I've used is at my local Woodcraft for classes and it seems to work fine and is a well made saw. I use a slider at home.

Not to mention a Hammer K3 Winner, while definitely a great saw, is $5700 minimum, whereas a Sawstop is about 4k. A 40% higher cost isn't anything to sneeze at.

Last- I fully agree you should have complete focus 100% of the time you're operating a tool. A Sawstop is not a reason to be sloppy. It's a "belt and suspenders" system that helps if you have a momentary lapse of judgement or if something kicks a weird way. In that regard it's similar to a blade guard. If you were 100% focused at all times you don't need a blade guard... but we're not robots here, we're people, and sometimes we make mistakes.

Hello Bert, Your perception is the only issue - nowhere was I personally insulting anyone, just expressing my opinion - no intent to insult you in the least. Not letting fear control your life was trying to be a positive message for all aspects of our lives = constant marketing in all areas, shoving fear down our throats - you will notice it more and more in commercials now that we have talked about it.
I consider a Hammer K3 to be a far superior product - "the real saw" was more a rip on all Chinese/Taiwan saw products, which very much cut corners on overall quality. Just checked prices - 3hp Sawstop about $4,500 & K3 Winner $5,700 = percentage differences are not as much as you stated - for only $1,200 more, you can get a far better product with much greater functionality. At least we agree people need to be far more careful, no matter what power tool they are using. Best of luck in all you do.

Andrew Hughes
03-11-2022, 8:28 PM
Thanks dan for the info. I’m surprised. I used to own a unisaw I cannot remember how much I paid for but it less then 2k. It was before sawstop came to market
I wonder saw stop owners still use push sticks or push pads.

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 9:14 PM
It limits damage in a massive, massive way for a whole lot of accidents. It doesn't just slightly lower the amount of injury you'll get. Look at the high speed videos out there. Sharp blades at high RPM will do damage... but the blade stops in something like 3 teeth moving past your finger. If you slap it like you're playing whack-a-mole you might get a lot of damage cut, but you're really over-minimizing how much of an effect the blade stopper can have for, say, a kickback causing your hand to pull into the blade. It turns a "cut your finger off" accident into a "get some stitches and Tylenol" accident. Studies have shown this to be true: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4154236/ There are more than 30,000 table saw accidents annually. Most of them are finger or thumb injuries, which are likely to be caused by blade contact (as opposed to a kickback, which Sawstops don't help with). The mean age of an occupational injury was 40 years. Assuming someone's been working in that career since they were in their 20's, that means the average table saw injury happened to someone with 15-20 years of experience.

Regarding "slamming" someone- your first post erroneously says that the SS won't prevent much damage in a tone that clearly implies that anyone who thinks otherwise simply isn't thinking about it enough. "Do not let fear control your life"- clearly, in the context of your post, you're saying anyone who buys a Sawstop is just letting marketing speak and fear control their lives. In your next post you say "You can get a real saw", which is clearly again an insult to anyone who likes their Sawstop. If someone said about your car "Well, if you get a real car, then..." or "Well, if you were a real parent, you'd..." That's what I call slamming. You might not be meaning it that way (since of course you can't convey much emotion through text) but that's what the words say. Consider how you'd feel if someone said that about you. Would you feel insulted?

No, I'm not sponsored by Sawstop or anything. The only one I've used is at my local Woodcraft for classes and it seems to work fine and is a well made saw. I use a slider at home.

Not to mention a Hammer K3 Winner, while definitely a great saw, is $5700 minimum, whereas a Sawstop is about 4k. A 40% higher cost isn't anything to sneeze at.

Last- I fully agree you should have complete focus 100% of the time you're operating a tool. A Sawstop is not a reason to be sloppy. It's a "belt and suspenders" system that helps if you have a momentary lapse of judgement or if something kicks a weird way. In that regard it's similar to a blade guard. If you were 100% focused at all times you don't need a blade guard... but we're not robots here, we're people, and sometimes we make mistakes.


Hello Bert, I looked over your link you stated was "proof" - I can help all understand that it most certainly is not proof of any sort. First, it is not a "government research" paper. In fact, footnotes state : "The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health." = it is just a research paper, written by 2 people, not approved or endorsed by any government agency. The paper was written in 2013, using data that is now 10-30 years+ old. The paper is contained in a library that has many millions of papers. "None of the authors or their family members has a financial interest in any of the products, devices, or drugs mentioned in this manuscript." = standard disclaimer, says zero about who funded research. Understand that such papers are typically funded by grants - based on the 2 authors "recommendations" , it is very obvious in my opinion, who funded the "work". Paper is pretty much worthless, much conjecture & use of typical terminology used in papers of such type. Considering how Steve Gass was attempting to force all table saws sold in the USA to have his technology on them, trying to get the USA government to enforce this at that time, it is not surprising in the least such a paper was written ( by people with zero woodworking experience). Where did you get such a link ? Saw Stop site ? Whomever sent it to you is not your friend. These are the facts I observed, not an attack on you - all of us should question when "studies show..." , "research indicates ..." = many times a little research will reveal biased/false statistics & nonsense. I will be glad to help anyone sort through any similar things = what is often touted as "science" or "proof" is anything but....

Bert McMahan
03-11-2022, 9:35 PM
Hello Bert, I looked over your link you stated was "proof" - I can help all understand that it most certainly is not proof of any sort. First, it is not a "government research" paper. In fact, footnotes state : "The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health." = it is just a research paper, written by 2 people, not approved or endorsed by any government agency. The paper was written in 2013, using data that is now 10-30 years+ old. The paper is contained in a library that has many millions of papers. "None of the authors or their family members has a financial interest in any of the products, devices, or drugs mentioned in this manuscript." = standard disclaimer, says zero about who funded research. Understand that such papers are typically funded by grants - based on the 2 authors "recommendations" , it is very obvious in my opinion, who funded the "work". Paper is pretty much worthless, much conjecture & use of typical terminology used in papers of such type. Considering how Steve Gass was attempting to force all table saws sold in the USA to have his technology on them, trying to get the USA government to enforce this at that time, it is not surprising in the least such a paper was written ( by people with zero woodworking experience). Where did you get such a link ? Saw Stop site ? Whomever sent it to you is not your friend. These are the facts I observed, not an attack on you - all of us should question when "studies show..." , "research indicates ..." = many times a little research will reveal biased/false statistics & nonsense. I will be glad to help anyone sort through any similar things = what is often touted as "science" or "proof" is anything but....

Hi Dave, you can Google search "table saw accidents" and it comes up right away. Also I never said it was a government research paper, I just said it was a study. So I understand that you don't trust it, but do you have data to back up your claims? Their data and methodology is freely available in the paper. I'm happy to be informed otherwise, but their study was extremely simple. It was just "There are a crapload of hand injuries with table saws, and a mechanism that helps stop that will be significantly helpful." Here is another study: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20065881/ that says the same thing, most table saw accidents are caused by contact with the blade.

I'm happy to understand how my view is wrong, but all of the testing I've ever seen clearly demonstrates that Sawstops won't hurt a hotdog that gets stuck in there. They do live demos at all of the trade shows I've heard of. Is your assertion that a Sawstop isn't safer than a standard table saw? If so please send me some sources or studies. I've seen MANY posts here on SMC with people saying how a Sawstop saved their finger. I've seen multiple studies that say finger and hand injuries are the most common type of table saw injury. I've got multiple, independent videos showing that Sawstops trigger within a very small number of teeth moving past your skin, causing only superficial damage. I don't care how fast the saw is moving, if it stops within 3 teeth moving past your hand you simply won't get much injury.

There are at least 2 additional companies with commercial, released mechanisms that do similar things to Sawstop. Clearly those companies think it's a helpful thing to have. I've yet to see even a single example of someone's hand hitting a Sawstop and still maintaining serious injuries. I'm not saying they don't exist, but I've never seen one. I'm just saying if you've got some evidence to the contrary post it up and we can all be informed.

Richard Coers
03-11-2022, 10:00 PM
Anyone that says a Sawstop is not worth it, has never had a serious accident in the shop. I know a guy that watched the ends of 4 fingers go flying over his head after a kickback with a dado head in his table saw. He instantly went from a craftsman to purely an owner. They put one finger back on, but a second surgery was needed to take it back off as the pain never subsided. I cut almost all the way through my middle finger on my left hand. The surgeon that reattached the 1" back on did not trim the bone well. At my first surgery followup, the surgeon mentioned how the finger was crooked. He grabbed the end of my finger and twisted it back into place. I nearly passed out. Next week he did the same thing. I left with sweat coming off my forehead and headed to my family doctor. I told him I needed a new surgeon. This took a second surgery and he did some bone work and got it better. This took a couple months out of my life. I was fortunate to have good insurance to pay for the $15,000 for the 1984 surgery and was a hobbyist at the time. If I was a professional woodworker at the time, I would have been a huge financial hit and by my calculations, more that the cost of the Sawstop.

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 11:10 PM
Hi Dave, you can Google search "table saw accidents" and it comes up right away. Also I never said it was a government research paper, I just said it was a study. So I understand that you don't trust it, but do you have data to back up your claims? Their data and methodology is freely available in the paper. I'm happy to be informed otherwise, but their study was extremely simple. It was just "There are a crapload of hand injuries with table saws, and a mechanism that helps stop that will be significantly helpful." Here is another study: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20065881/ that says the same thing, most table saw accidents are caused by contact with the blade.

I'm happy to understand how my view is wrong, but all of the testing I've ever seen clearly demonstrates that Sawstops won't hurt a hotdog that gets stuck in there. They do live demos at all of the trade shows I've heard of. Is your assertion that a Sawstop isn't safer than a standard table saw? If so please send me some sources or studies. I've seen MANY posts here on SMC with people saying how a Sawstop saved their finger. I've seen multiple studies that say finger and hand injuries are the most common type of table saw injury. I've got multiple, independent videos showing that Sawstops trigger within a very small number of teeth moving past your skin, causing only superficial damage. I don't care how fast the saw is moving, if it stops within 3 teeth moving past your hand you simply won't get much injury.

There are at least 2 additional companies with commercial, released mechanisms that do similar things to Sawstop. Clearly those companies think it's a helpful thing to have. I've yet to see even a single example of someone's hand hitting a Sawstop and still maintaining serious injuries. I'm not saying they don't exist, but I've never seen one. I'm just saying if you've got some evidence to the contrary post it up and we can all be informed.
Hello Bert, The main point I was trying to make was WHO funded their little paper & we know the answer to that. They list footnotes, which would be required on any such paper, but the 30,000 yearly figure sure appears to be a figure that was handed to them - either way it does appear many accidents occur but little analysis of who is getting injured & under what conditions. What is relevant for all is to take the 30,000 figure into context - the 2013 paper did mention that there were over 9 million + table saws in use at time (2013) in the USA - figure could be much higher in actual number. Number of injuries seems tiny in view of number of saws = 0.333 injuries per saw, 1/3 of 1%. People who feel they must have a SawStop, to be safe, should buy one. I will not ever need one anytime soon.

Anuj Prateek
03-11-2022, 11:11 PM
Sawstops are silly. As long as you always pay attention you have nothing to fear. Same reason I never wear my seatbelt, it's just fearmongering. As long as I'm a safe driver I'm totally fine. Same with shoes- don't want to hurt your feet? Try not stepping on sharp things! Bike helmets? Easy, just don't fall off your bike. :D


That made me laugh :)

My contractor with over 3 decades of experience lost his thumb in the only accident with table saw. After hearing his story, I stopped looking at other saws and bought a SawStop.

Dave Roock
03-11-2022, 11:52 PM
https://www.popularwoodworking.com/article/table-saw-injury-numbers-in-perspective/ This should be read by all - the perspective that just as many amputations occur in door accidents yearly as in table saw amputations = serious food for thought. Statistics, often manipulated.......

mreza Salav
03-12-2022, 12:00 AM
I never understand, you see value in it you buy it, you think it's for sissies and fearful people and it never happens to you don't buy it.

Anuj Prateek
03-12-2022, 12:36 AM
It's no different than insurance. One either sees it's importance or one doesn't. And then one can either afford it or one can't.

This reminds me of when technologies like ABS and non-driver airbags came out in India. There used to be similar discussions. Eventually, they became more affordable and people started buying them. Then slowly they became standard options on all cars. I think same will happen with saws and eventually other woodworking machines.

Maybe only 0.001% people lose hands in table saw accidents. I just don't want to be in that 0.001%. If quality of SawStop was low or they weren't affordable (to me) then I would have certainly looked into probabilities.

Bert McMahan
03-12-2022, 12:48 AM
https://www.popularwoodworking.com/article/table-saw-injury-numbers-in-perspective/ This should be read by all - the perspective that just as many amputations occur in door accidents yearly as in table saw amputations = serious food for thought. Statistics, often manipulated.......

Are you seriously saying that it's the same thing? People use doors constantly, day in and day out. All the time. Everyone walks through a door what, dozens of times a day? And what tiny percentage of people use table saws daily? It's not even sort of a similar comparison. Talk about misleading statistics. Comparing door injuries to table saw injuries is silly and shows a profound lack of understanding of how to generate relative statistics.

Using your numbers of 0.3% annual chance of having a table saw incident, 8% of people will have one over a 30 year period. That's one in 13 people who frequently use table saws. Comparing it to a door is silly.

I'm done with this, you seem to think anyone saying a Sawstop can help is a paid shill and will reject "cute little studies" with no evidence.

Dennis Jarchow
03-12-2022, 1:43 AM
Hello Dennis, A Saw Stop saw would have not prevented what happened to you - you would have been out the cost of your blade & $90 brake, plus time & labor re-installing both. For marginally a little more $, you can buy a real saw, not made in China, a Hammer K3 Winner. Look into that, I believe you will be very satisfied with your decision if you go with a Hammer K3.

I would love to have a slider but I don't have the room, nor the 5k to spend on the saw vs. $3k for the Sawstop. As a kid I watched my dad almost cut his entire thumb off with his home made death trap saw. Luckily the blade went into his hand between his thumb and index finger and just cut an inch of muscle and missed the bones. I remember wondering at the time how a neighbor driving by and honking at him could make him that careless. My little nick on the chop saw made me realize I might not be as careful as my 30 year accident free streak made me think I was. The Sawstops seem to be among the best reviewed saws in their price class. Not crazy about having to have to pay an extra $500 for the brake tech but if that is important to you, they are the only game in town. Well except for the Felder Kappa 550 with their even better finger saving tech. Course now we are back to talking about even bigger sliders I don't have room for not to mention the $15k+ I don't have.

Larry Frank
03-12-2022, 7:20 AM
It is a always amazing how these threads get to be the same old thing.

The Sawstop is a very good, solid saw without even considering the safety. People will argue that this saw or another is better but really little difference.

Why all the discussion? It is so very clear. If you want a Sawstop, then buy one. If you dislike them, buy something else. I have one because it provides an extra bit of safety.

Michael Fink
03-12-2022, 8:01 AM
It is a always amazing how these threads get to be the same old thing.

The Sawstop is a very good, solid saw without even considering the safety. People will argue that this saw or another is better but really little difference.

Why all the discussion? It is so very clear. If you want a Sawstop, then buy one. If you dislike them, buy something else. I have one because it provides an extra bit of safety.

I'm in agreement. I'm very happy with my PCS, it's a good saw, runs true, easy to adjust and work with. Never set of the brake, thank goodness.

If a good saw was 1K and a SS was 5K, I might forgo the protection. But a good saw is 3K and a PCS is also, around 3K, seems pretty simple to me.

My decision came down to a slider vs a SS. I still have dreams of having a slider at some point, which, frankly, is probably even safer than a SS because there's no reason to be near the blade (and has a lot of other advantages as well, of course). But I'm very happy with my SS.

I kind of see it like a car dealer saying "Would you like airbags" and then telling me "It's a 0 dollar option". Well, duh, of course I want airbags if it's not a big uplift in price!

Frank Pratt
03-12-2022, 11:41 AM
This was not intended as a thread to bring out the flat earther. It was for a laugh about a common spelling mistake. We all make spelling mistakes so let's have some fun with it. Mods, how about we just close this one down.

Andrew Hughes
03-12-2022, 1:29 PM
I’ve noticed a few different topics that are impossible. Chisels sharpening , tablesaws and even table saw blades.
Let the record show Frank inadvertently stirred the pot. I don’t mind a spritted discussion on all subjects woodworking.
I bet this kind of back and forth has been going on since the beginning of time.
Here is some good humor. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5adk_8_4JEw&list=WL&index=2
Good Luck everyone

Eric Cothern
03-12-2022, 10:34 PM
Buy a Sawstop or don't. I am sure over 99% of the people will never have an accident and those who did not get one will wish they have and those who did are thankful they did buy one when the figure touches the blade. I have a buddy who runs a cabinet shop who has a couple Sawstops for 5 or 6 years. He said his employees have set it them off 4 times and he, his employees and his insurance are thankful they had them in the shop.

Andrew Seemann
03-13-2022, 12:58 PM
This was not intended as a thread to bring out the flat earther. It was for a laugh about a common spelling mistake. We all make spelling mistakes so let's have some fun with it. Mods, how about we just close this one down.

I think this is what you had in mind Frank. Italics added in case someone thinks this is continuation of the actual arguments in the post and not me having fun and taking excessive liberties with diction:)

Yes, this topic certainly effects quite the affect on people. You need to lay down rules on the topic, as this is something where people's passion lie, even as it's a debate with its own merits. Then you can keep the discussion from becoming one of those "My view is better than your view", as it is an illusion that people will look past the allusion of their personal values being reflected in their choice of saw. People tend to lose their emotions when a flurry of posts are let loose challenging their tools. Anyway, any way we can keep the discussion civil is to all our betterment. Posts that just show the honest advantages and disadvantages of a tool are those which help the user community. There are many different approaches to doing things, for what works for one person in their shop; they're going to be the best judge. Too many times we forget to take into account someones specific situation, remember no two people and environments are the same.

OK. I think I have elicited enough illicit wordplay:)

Mike Kees
03-13-2022, 1:39 PM
Buy a Sawstop or don't. I am sure over 99% of the people will never have an accident and those who did not get one will wish they have and those who did are thankful they did buy one when the figure touches the blade. I have a buddy who runs a cabinet shop who has a couple Sawstops for 5 or 6 years. He said his employees have set it them off 4 times and he, his employees and his insurance are thankful they had them in the shop.
So going against my better judgement here I have decided to post. Before I say anything else I do not care what saw people use, there are good reasons either way. My question is ,I just have to wonder how many TS "accidents" happened in this comercial shop in the 5-6 period before this buddy of yours purchased Sawstop machines ? I have my own business and have experienced one employee in particular who came through a school shop system with a Sawstop. He was very careless and not at all cognizant of where his hands were around a TS. Now this was a sample size of one young man. I get schools endorsing and using them because of liability issues. But I have to wonder if basic human nature means as soon as one has protection that safe practices become more of a mute point. I have also looked at kickbacks having the potential to be far more life threatening than cutting a finger. (Not saying I want to cut a finger.) Anyhow could we please find other topics to discuss.:D

Jerome Stanek
03-13-2022, 2:56 PM
So going against my better judgement here I have decided to post. Before I say anything else I do not care what saw people use, there are good reasons either way. My question is ,I just have to wonder how many TS "accidents" happened in this comercial shop in the 5-6 period before this buddy of yours purchased Sawstop machines ? I have my own business and have experienced one employee in particular who came through a school shop system with a Sawstop. He was very careless and not at all cognizant of where his hands were around a TS. Now this was a sample size of one young man. I get schools endorsing and using them because of liability issues. But I have to wonder if basic human nature means as soon as one has protection that safe practices become more of a mute point. I have also looked at kickbacks having the potential to be far more life threatening than cutting a finger. (Not saying I want to cut a finger.) Anyhow could we please find other topics to discuss.:D

I agree with you the only accident that I needed stiches for was a kick back that hit my palm and I needed 9 stiches. I have been using table saws for 60 years I just always think bout getting hurt.

johnny means
03-13-2022, 3:05 PM
Just thought I'd do this here. https://youtu.be/SYLAi4jwXcs

Larry Frank
03-13-2022, 7:01 PM
That is a very good video showing high speed brake activation. It is amazing that the Sawstop is rigged and well built to withstand the brake firing with a dado blade. It was interesting seeing him run the hot dog into the blade as fast as he could.

I have never considered being less safe because I have a Sawstop. That 10" blade running is a bit scary.

Jim Dwight
03-13-2022, 8:06 PM
I had used a table saw for about 50 years with no injuries but then I got stupid one day and held a piece of 2x3 over a new throat plate as I raised a 3/4 dado through it. I raised the 2x3 piece, a little one, to check on progress. It caught and the third finger on my left hand hit the blade. I got a broken bone and 6 stitches but I still have the finger and only have a little nerve damage and missing tissue. I am pretty sure I'd be missing at least the end of that finger if I had not been using a PCS. I bought it a couple years before the incident. I thought I was pretty careful and had a pretty long track record to support that but it only takes one stupid decision...

I do not like how SawStop technology was marketed at first but I do like my hands. It is absolutely correct to say if you are careful and don't make any bad decisions you don't need one. But it only takes one mistake to wish you had one. I also do not like SawStop saying they prevent serious injury. I think broken bones and stitches are pretty significant. But it was a lot less than it would have been if the blade had not stopped quickly and dropped. Absent something like kickback, I think you are likely to avoid stitches but I do not plan on finding out.

It also is a nice saw. The technology is a bit of a pain the the backside requiring a cartridge change to put in a dado stack and pretty much preventing you from using sharpened blades but it's still worth it in my opinion. So far, we all still get to have our own opinions, at least on this.

Peter Mich
03-13-2022, 8:22 PM
….It also is a nice saw. The technology is a bit of a pain the the backside requiring a cartridge change to put in a dado stack and pretty much preventing you from using sharpened blades but it's still worth it in my opinion. So far, we all still get to have our own opinions, at least on this.

I hadn’t heard about this and was wondering if you might elaborate. Are we to avoid blades that have been resharpened?

mreza Salav
03-14-2022, 1:10 AM
I hadn’t heard about this and was wondering if you might elaborate. Are we to avoid blades that have been resharpened?

Not true. You can use sharpened blade. If needed you can adjust the brake distance.

Rod Sheridan
03-14-2022, 7:31 AM
……….. I will not ever need one anytime soon.

Hopefully not, I never needed one until after 45 years of woodworking I cut off the ends of two fingers saving my daughter’s cat from the tablesaw.

Active safety systems are no substitute for training and safe work practices including using appropriate passive safety devices.

Passive safety systems haven’t changed since 1904 when Altendorf introduced the riving knife, a testament to their effectiveness, however active safety systems are the new additional layer that increases operator safety.

Regards, Rod