SawStop - How It Works
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- Опубліковано 17 жов 2024
- #woodworking
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SawStop is famous for its safety features when it comes to table saws! SawStop's unique saw blade braking system stops a moving saw in a split second if a finger even gets near it saving the user from lost fingers or serious injury.
It's a great saw to have in any woodworking shop, or bring it to the jobsite and get your projects done safely! These table saws come with different size fences ranging from 30" to 52" and could be easily modified with additional accessories to reduce your exposure to sawdust, extend your work space with folding tables or cast iron wings and other options.
SawStop saw systems come in many different models suitable for the small woodworking shop or hobbyist and scaling up to larger professional and industrial heavy-duty environments. If you looking for the safest table saw to purchase, look no further! SawStop is the table saw you need!
The inventor of this is a legend. Don't even know his name, but he's a legend.
Joh Legend?
Dr. Steve Gass
That's how you know you will live on forever - when you invent something so innovative that your name is forgotten. Who invented the traffic light? Wi-Fi? The television? No one knows. Well, we know, but it's not common knowledge. Those things are. And their maker lives on through them. The saw stop? It will save fingers until the end of time, and no one knows the name of the man who made it.
@@hey9433 Well said!
I don't know anything about him, but I think he deserves a huge high four from all of us!
The fact that you have SawStop doesn't mean you should treat your saw with carelessness. Treat it as if it was an ordinary saw
Exactly
...REALLY?!
What an idiotic comment.
Not your saw not your buisness
@@michaeljames6661 What is this? Oh I’m king of the saws, I’m the saw-meister...
Just a wonderful invention.
One that’s saved countless fingers and undoubtedly made the inventor a very wealthy person.
Absolutely!
This invention is anti-semitic because it forces the business owner to buy a new plate and a new cartridge.. an employee can get fired and be replaced FOR FREE
I am soo happy this technology exists, it definitely gonna save millions of wood workers, carpenter, diy projects, etc alhamdulillah
alhamdulillah
alhamblahblah
@@Walterbrown1 Algamdulillah
without lies, islam dies
@@itstoasty7089 u remember about ur religion when u hear about islam
I case you're wondering I've tripped mine twice, once with a tape measure and once it tapped my miter gauge. It happens faster than your brain can process it. You'll think you've broken the saw...and it's really loud. BANG! Kind of pricey because it ruins the brake and the blade.. About $180 a pop.. Still cheaper and less painful than a finger..
Yeah if saves my finger I’m happy
Tbh $180 was a lot less than I was expecting. Definitely worth the cost
Honestly even if $180 seems like much it is a lot better than a trip to the hospital, I'm very happy this kind of invention is getting the recognition it deserves.
Just when you think you have seen it all. Amazing.
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Absolutely ingenious. Amazing. One of the best safety innovations in the workshop.
Does it work? YES, yes it does couldve destroyed my finger in shop class today but thank the lord the stop worked and saved me. Genuinely would be in the ER as im writing this had it not been there.
So did all you get was a small little gash? Any stitches or just a bandaid?
@@GlobalOutcast From the other videos I've seen where people cut their actual fingers, it's usually a band aid.
@@GlobalOutcastdefinitely not a gash worthy unless you like drive your hand into it
They should honestly licence the IP and have this integrated into as many saws as possible (festool, Makita, hitachi, Milwaukee, dewalt etc)
Apparently, the inventor tried that. No takers. They all thought adding this device to their product would be an admission that their products are inherently unsafe, and an admission like that would open them up to lawsuits, so they all passed.
@@dLimboStick That's retarded. Everyone with half a brain understands that a table-saw is inherently unsafe.
@@dLimboStick Their products are inherently unsafe.
@@dLimboStick wouldnt what you just said about them saying also be an admission that their products are inherently unsafe? Also, anyone with a brain cell can see their products are inherently unsafe lol....
Wish the workplace my brother was working at had this technology.. he passed away from a saw accident at a lumber yard
Who's the genius behind this? Props 👏👏
my school only started implementing these for shop classes after a teacher cut off his ring and pinky finger during a demo
Bro…
Truly amazing invention.
With this the dangerousness machine, this machine is the good one… it saves a lot of thumbs… Alhamdulillah, thank you SawStop’s makers
does this work to cut conductive material like metals?
There is a "bypass mode" you can enter to disable the safety system, so you can cut conductive materials. Otherwise, it would trigger the brake.
That's very clever
I want to know that this technology available in india
This is amazing!
The things we can do with electricity, lasers, sonic frequencies, etc... this'll save a lot of limbs, and possibly lives.
Amazing.
That's really cool
What is terrifying, is that it still isn't mandatory. Because of some interests, in money, not safety.
It shouldn't be mandatory.
@@fluffylittlebear yep, later when I thought about it more, I realized that if it reacts on moisture, for frequent use it is non usable. Especially if it takes time and money to replace that trigger - safety.
@@bosesebi6685 yup but for how much you'd sell your finger or hand?
@@pavelnesmiyanov3166 Too unpractical.
@@bosesebi6685 There is literally a bypass mode so that you can still use conductive materials there should be little to no false triggers. In workshops with beginners or even in woodworking schools this is a godsent gift.
If I try to touch blade of the SawStop table saw, the stoppage device will be activated
Impressive 😉👍
So cool
You are not supposed wear gloves while using saw stop, if any one is wondering as it works based on conductivity.
I was thinking you'd need a whole new saw but it'd be worth it cause you kept you're finger but "no damage to the saw just change cartridge out"
even though it cost 160 bucks every time there is a accident, it is 100% worth it.
Absolutely!
thats fantastic
it is isn't it!
Does the sawstop prevent you from using wet/damp wood?
Though I have no first person experience, the answer os NO. (see the sawstop myth debunking video). The wood would have to be totaly soaked with water so that water splashes out of it.
@@RoadCorporation You can also operate it in bypass mode which allows you to cut conductive metal for example.
@@foty8679 Thanks for the info :-)
Amazing
I have a table saw from the late 80's maybe. I dont use it but once or twice a year. Anyways, it scares the bejesus out of me every time i do turn the darn thing on.
The Yakuza hate this invention.
What happen to using a wooden material push...
Worked then , would work now
Whilst I agree that this is good practice, what if someone trips and falls onto the spinning blade ? This system would greatly reduce the damage. And even though safety is always the most important thing in a workshop, using something to push often isn't as comfortable as using your hands, which if it really bothers the user would make the sawstop absolutely necessary for them.
That is incredible.
It’s all fun and games until a dad sticks their hand in the middle of the saw to see if it stops and you end up with a Mortal Kombat fatality move instead.
You din't talk about the real deal, where is the sensor, how the main processor detect a hand colition.
there is no 'sensor'. the electric signal leaves the 'saw' when the finger touches the saw and that triggers the brake.
What if i go faster
I'm probably not jumping back on the saw in 5 minutes if I just narrowly avoided unintended amputation....
That's incredible!
License it. Please
Look how slow he moved that hotdog onto the saw blade. Let me see you slam it on there.
It works the same no matter how fast you touch it.
wow
Who's putting their fingers on a spinning blade?
what if i just slap the blade?
Let me know!
naw i will not slap the blade
There's a demo of that towards the beginning
ua-cam.com/video/NV6Jhw0hhBI/v-deo.html
@@michawhite7613 thanks for the link but it didn't tell me about slapping my hand on to it
@@Noob-hq2lk If you're interested in whether putting your hand on top of the blade makes a difference as opposed to the side, I assume not. The entire blade conducts electricity, not just the part that happens to be on the right sight at the moment
It may "help" but all these tests not one person stuck his/her finger or hand fast into the saw blade like a normal person does during an accident!
Look up more videos, some did, it only breaks a little bit of the skin.
@@ronanvialon7695 I have since I posted.. you're right. But I'm nit sticking my finger Ina saw to find out! 🤣🤣👊🏼
@@19jody72 Luckily others have so we don't have to 😂
@@ronanvialon7695 🤣🤣
I don’t think the saw will stop quick enough if you slam your finger on it. Maybe gently yes.
I highly recommend that you do not try to punch a saw blade while its on. Not sure how fast you can move your finger into the blade but usually everyone pushes material through a saw at a steady rate so as long as you are not cutting wood ninja style, this saw will save your finger
@@Woodworkerexpress Indeed. Saws should always be treated with respect. A fellow creator on UA-cam by the name of "Jonathan Katz-Moseshas" tested this however and the results were frankly amazing. It would be a nasty cut, but your finger/hand would still be intact it seems!
There's a demo of that towards the beginning of this video. It still works
ua-cam.com/video/NV6Jhw0hhBI/v-deo.html
now lets push to get them to introduce a similar concept onto airplane engines when the plane is grounded
I never knew this existed.
Note to self: pick up banana peels around table saw
I as a 26 year old male lived to see computers take over. I hate tech for a lot of reasons. This is one way technology proves to be so important is surpasses time.
Mine didn't work correctly. I no longer have any legs. The End.
Whoever invented this, hope he's still can high 5 to celebrate
A bold claim for saving fingers. However using proper blade guards will save more fingers! Using a table saw without proper training and without a blade guard is like driving a car without a seat belt and not passing a driving test. It's going to end badly
do it with your finger not a hotdog. there are body armor developers that literally shoot themselves with it on to show it works.
don't be such a weirdo edgelord
It still hits your finger, you get minor cuts. It's not gonna trigger until you touch the blade unlike bulletproof vests that completely stops the bullet and all you get is at most a punch in the chest.
Alhamdulillah
Not 7 of my paps fingers
Not all that great. Shouldn't destroy itslef in the process. It's a bad design. I get saving body parts but flesh isn't the only thing that can trigger it and as soon as it is triggered, you lose money.
Business likes to pretend their safety features aren't all about money. Shame
What are you cutting? I don't think wood can conduct electricity.
Doesn’t ruin the blade? Did you not just shove the blade into a block of aluminum?!
It does ruin the blade
Yes. As they say at the end of the video, you need to replace the blade. Although, blades are easier to replace than fingers.
Common sense was invented thousands of years ago... unfortunately7 too many people don't use it... when using ANY saw, even a hand saw, keep ypu fingers at least six inches away from the blade... when using a table saw, use a 'push stick' to push the timber through and NEVER... I mean NEVER, operate the saw without the safety guard.... and again, NEVER adjust or change the blade whilst the machine is plugged in
Better than nothing though
We just gonna ignore the flying piece of plastic that broke off at 0:40?
why do you care?
That is under the tabletop, there's a tiny gap (that your blade goes through) where that piece potentially could come through... but being a responsible table saw user, you've got eyepro on... so in the insanely small chance that that small shard comes anywhere near you, you're covered.
Awesome technology until it fails, and triggers the blade brake for no reason (destroying your blade + brake). Has happened twice to us now (more than half a year apart), first time was on startup before anything even touched the blade, second time was halfway through a dry, clean MDF sheet.
The blade gets incredibly jammed into the brake after firing, and is an ordeal to get clear; definitely not a 5 minute repair. If you have an extra blade and an extra brake on hand, maybe thirty minutes to an hour...
Great concept and I'm glad we have ours (I do love my fingers), but it's extremely frustrating when your saw can just quit on you for no reason (literally - we sent the brake in for testing, even SawStop said it was a misfire), and totally screw up your workflow, project deadlines, etc.
Unreliable experience with our SawStop so far... One false misfire - sure, I could accept that. But two now? And do they pay for your blade or your time? Nope...
😩🥺😢😢😢
DUMPERT
“A new cartridge, a new blade and five minutes and you’re back in business”🔥
Capitalism don’t need to stop 🤑
How else whould you do it ? Come on, come up with a safety system that works as well and won't break the blade nor the sytem.