Wanna see momentum in action? Spin a steel sanding disc at saw joint speed and turn it off.

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Wanna see momentum in action? Spin a steel sanding disc at saw joint speed and turn it off.
The arbor has to be connected to the spindle with a clutch to do it. I'm not saying it's at all practical, but not impossible. Another factor Scott mentioned is that Shopsmith and other manufacturers don't want to roll over and accept the SawStop claim that table saws are inherently so dangerous without their system or that much safer with it.
We had an interesting discussion until you ignored everything I said about how an electric brake might work for the PowerPro. Then you bring up an anecdote I choose not to believe. I never said stopping a spinning saw blade would not be calamitous. I do dispute it being to the level to flip a Mark V. Even Bosch, a 3rd tier woodworking company today, can get this right on a contractor TS and without it flipping upside down apparently.
I don't think anyone here is saying "everything can be made risk free." But some dangerous things can be made safer without sacrificing intended use/operation, and sometimes notwithstanding either (1) deficient safety equipment between the ears of the operator or (2) a momentary lapse in attention/judgment.JPG wrote: ↑Fri Jan 26, 2024 11:05 am "Safety" minded folks who 'think' everything can be made risk free are ignoring the purpose of those dangerous tools. They are also overlooking the necessary detail of the human operator being the usual cause as well as the victim of 'accidents'.
'Accidents' occur due to unanticipated events( unanticipated includes ignoring the obvious possibility).
I put the onus on the operator who ignores the obvious as the cause of 'accidents'.
Saws(powered) are intended to cut wood and in the case of a chain saw do so very violently. To do their task they must have clear access to the thing being sawn and the operator needs to be able to see what is happening.
If one wants total protection from injury, stay in that imaginary bubble that is risk free(or do not engage in activity that requires operator intelligence and acute observation and anticipation of potential misfunction).
It looks that way. In a link from the video containing a letter from CPSC commissioner Rich Trumka are the snippets below. In contrast to his statements here is a report from NIH Library of Science. Instead of 65,000 injuries per year cited by the CPSC they state less than half that number, and 2/3 of the injuries are simply lacerations. It also includes statistics that separate occupational and non-occupational injuries, and that 15% of the injuries are not related to blade contact. I have more of the CPSC material to go over but it sounds like this CPSC commissioner is for some reason motivated to paint a less than accurate picture of table saw accidents favoring required use of SawStop technology to change. Since the majority of these accidents are occupational I don't see how CPSC should be involved instead of OSHA and insurance companies. The NIH report also states that despite requirements for riving knives, anti-kickback protection and blade guards in place for a number of years the accident rate remains stable, and that is clearly because users don't use the safety equipment. SawStops can have the safety feature turned off for use with green wood and special blades but I assume it's quite easy to turn back on, giving it one clear advantage over guards and the like, but I'm sure SawStop users fail to use the riving knive and blade guard as often as users of other saws. I think a careful analysis of the injuries would make it difficult to justify the high cost of SawStop type technology, although much of that cost would be related to the rather simple and inexpendive blade contact detection technology that would have to be licensed from SawStop.
Rich Trumka, CPSC Commissioner wrote: Now that I work at CPSC, I see that my concerns are backed by tragic statistics. Table
saws injure over 50,000 people a year. And these are gruesome injuries like fractures and finger
amputations. The Civil War was responsible for 60,000 amputations. Table Saws are
responsible for more: 65,000 amputations…and that’s just since we were petitioned to fix the
issue.
Rich Trumka, CPSC Commissioner wrote: But today, we advanced a rule to save those fingers. To stop those amputations.
Technology exists that could prevent table saws from cutting more than 3.5 millimeters into skin.
That turns an ER trip to a trip to the medicine cabinet for a band aid. And our rule would require
that level of safety. In doing so, the rule would provide the greatest net benefit to society of any
rule in the agency’s history that I’m aware of—up to a $2.32 billion net benefit every year.
It’s troubling that it took this long. An inventor created a solution to this problem a
quarter century ago, back in 1999. And he petitioned this agency to require that level of safety
on table saws in 2003. We’ve wasted 20 years. In the time it’s taken this agency to act on this
petition, table saws have injured one million people.
Rich Trumka, CPSC Commissioner wrote: The one place where I draw issue with the proposal is that it would require us to wait for
three more years before the rule goes into effect. That would mean agreeing to severely injure
150,000 more innocent people—people we should instead be protecting.