I’m always
very careful to keep womanized wood away from a spinning saw blade. :chuckle:
I’ve never seen a reason to cut pressure treated lumber on a table saw. Always used chop saws and circular saws. I guess somebody must do it somewhere. I doubt it has a capacitive signature like flesh so I’d guess it should work fine.
GregCavi said:
I hope that is the future of ALL tables saws....
That’s what he tried to do at first. I remember talking to the guy years ago at a trade show (unfortunately he didn’t have a hotdog at the time so I didn’t get see the demo live). He’d developed the sensing and braking technology and was presenting it to manufacturers for licensing.
None of the saw makers bought into it. I think he also tried to get government safety agencies involved but they didn’t push for it. So he was forced to either give up or manufacture his own saw.
Getting into the machine manufacturing biz had to be really tough. I’m sure glad he pulled it off. Sounds like he’s got a fine product, and not just from a safety perspective. It appears to be an excellent saw.
It’s kind of a catch-22. The saw business is very competitive and the players are all over the world. Margins are razor thin. Nobody else wants to be the first one to raise prices to add a safety feature if the market isn’t demanding it, the competition isn’t doing it or everybody isn’t forced to by regulations. Government agencies are reluctant to force everybody to adopt a proprietary technology or put their own country’s industry at a disadvantage if the other countries’ aren’t. But if he opens it up for everybody to use it for free he gets screwed.
I think he made a smart choice by making his first product a high-grade industrial cabinet saw. I think he’ll get his best sales there at first. From there he can grow the company. If I was in the market for one I’d definitely check it out.
PC.