Ed in Tampa wrote:Relatively modest price??????? How about doubling the cost of the saw. The saw he was using was a cheap Ryobi that sold for under 200. Which probably cost the manufacture $100 or less to build. Add to that $100 the cost and royality of Gass's product and manufacturer would have had somewhere around double the cost of the original saw to get it to market.
Yes Gass will dispute that figure but as of yet he hasn't been able to bring to market a saw using his technology that isn't 2 to 3 times the cost of similar saws on the market.
Simply put the saw would probably cost $400 or more. I don't know this man's employers cash flow but it is conceivable that being forced to pay this much for a saw would preclude the employer from ever hiring the man that got hurt. Nobody thinks about that.
Also what nobody thinks about is how many workers Ryobi will be forced to layoff because their once under $200 saw is now over $400 and nobody is buying them. How many thousands of dollars will be lost there. Who feeds the kids of these laidoff workers? The bottom feeding lawyers don't care.
How about the small business that now can't get workers comp for a price they can afford to pay because everyone saw this big pay out and potential for more bottom feeding lawyers to make money, so he has to go out of business. Who feeds the kids of the workers he laid off?
All action have reactions and reactions often aren't considered by jurys, judges or bottom feeding lawyers.
Would you please site some specifics that back up this ascertain. I am curious because this is the sort of table saw that I think of when I dream and I cannot find a SawStop that costs 3 times what this does. Here is what I see for comparable SawStops.