Pretty much
every woodworker will agree that conventional guards get in the way and are
generally a pain in the caboose, but the bottom line is – they DO work. If you
use them properly and allow them to do their job, they will prevent you from
injuring yourself. Sadly, most woodworkers think they are too smart, too
experienced, too ‘whatever’ - insert your own descriptive phrase that means
‘Those are for other folks not me’ - to need one. That’s when they get
complacent and find themselves missing a finger or worse. Guards are not just
for dummys. As we used to say in the Navy, most safety rules are written in
someone’s blood. Guards fit this saying very well. One can be sawing along and
have a kickback which throws their hand into the blade and poof, all of a
sudden, there is a stump where a finger used to be. It’s NOT a pretty sight.
Guards WILL prevent that, but one has to be willing to actually USE them.
Nowadays
one cannot talk about guarding of saws without mentioning a newfangled
invention called “flesh-sensing technology”. The background of this is an
invention of one Steve Gass and it is found on saws of his creation that are
known as Sawstop. (note: for a video of how this works, just Google “Sawstop
hot dog”)
The
invention itself, is kinda kool, but the politics surrounding it have left many
a woodworker
confused and some even a bit hacked at Mr. Gass. Once you see the video, I’m
sure you’ll be impressed. You’ll see a hot dog slowly passed across a saw table
- directly into a spinning saw blade, then, faster than you can saw ‘wow’, the
blade will disappear with a loud BANG! Then you’ll see the side of the wiener
and it will have a small cut on it. The hot dog represents a person’s finger,
which would normally be cut severely and it will only have a small scratch on
it. A truly ingenious device that can, and has, saved many a digit, I am sure.
BUT…the method
of how this invention has been presented to the market has soured many a folk.
Details next time…
Send your questions or comments to:
Toolsmartz@bellsouth.net and we’ll see what
we can do to help you
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