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Thread: Saw Stop safety saw

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
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    NY State
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    Saw Stop safety saw

    Is anyone using the Saw Stop safety saw? I have a PM 66, I bought 8 months ago, and I think it's pretty darn good. However, realizing that the table saw is probably the most accident prone tool in a WW shop, I am considering moving to the Saw Stop. Comments from anyone will be appreciated. FWIW, the PM 66 cost about 2200 and the Saw Stop will probably cost about 3800 with extra cartridges, Biesmeyer type fence, etc. If it really works, my feeling is that the bucks are worth it. Just attended a Gary Rogowski seminar, and like he even says, "odds are that sooner or later the table saw is going to bite you". This won't happen to everyone but I don't want to be one of the statistics that has 4 fingers left on one of my hands. Rogowski says he avoids using the table saw anytime he can by opting for the band saw usually.

    Any comments would be appreciated.

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by Bob Michaels
    Just attended a Gary Rogowski seminar, and like he even says, "odds are that sooner or later the table saw is going to bite you". This won't happen to everyone but I don't want to be one of the statistics that has 4 fingers left on one of my hands. Rogowski says he avoids using the table saw anytime he can by opting for the band saw usually.

    Any comments would be appreciated.

    The saw stop is a nice machine and you can't go wrong
    by keeping all of your digits.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    KC, MO
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    Bob,

    First of all, welcome to SMC!!

    There are quite a few "creekers" that have Sawstops and they helped me very much in my decision making. I'm sure you'll here from them soon!!!

    I took delivery of my Sawstop in July. The setup took awhile.....and I would honestly say I was a little irritated at the procedure - believing everything would be "perfect" out of the box....but it took a little tweaking here and there.....it was just hot in the garage so I was cranky!

    This aside, I'm happy with the saw! The riving knife is excellent as well as the knife/spreader/blade guard combo. These are two important safety features on the saw- so that you don't get to the third !! The riving knife virtually eliminates kickback.

    It is a very smooth running machine. The miter slots are parallel, their Beis-type fence is accurate. The ext. table is pretty solid.

    Dust collection is good due to the dedicated shroud underneath and around the blade. It runs thru a 4" port in the back where I connect a 5" flex hose to my Cyclone. I wish it were a 5" dia. hose inside the cabinet as the CFM would be greater - but it does work well. I added a Felder blade guard that has a DC port so now dust is minimal.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Oak View, CA
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    84
    I have a SawStop. It replaced my 1.5 hp Delta contractors saw. The SawStop is ever so much better. Mine was right on out of the box. It's solid and easily passes the penny test. I thought about a PowerMatic but went for the SawStop hoping that I'd never use its safety feature but would be very grateful if I ever did. I was also very much sold on the built in riving knife. I think that the riving knife by itself would have been enough for me to go for the SawStop instead of the PowerMatic. I suspect that except for the riving knife and the blade stopping mechanism of the SawStop that the saws are otherwise essentially identical. However, since I've never had the pleasure of using a PowerMatic 66, I can't say for sure.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
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    Anywhere it snows....
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    Welcome Aboard Bob...

    First let me introduce myself. My name is Dev, aka Dr. Martin. I rebuild and restore super high end machines like Martins, Hofmanns, Wynigs, Olivers, etc. which I then use in my cabinet and tool buinsess. My own table saw is a Martin that tips the scale at over 2500 pounds. I also own an oliver 88-DM with a sliding top which tips the scale at about the same weight.

    First let me say that the new saw stop seems to be a very well recieved machine and the quality seems to be there. But its not for everyone. I have been using table saws since about 1975 and I will never purchase a saw stop saw myself. That is me. Everyone is entitled to their opinions. For me, super precision and ultra accuracy in the machine are worth more than the gimmicks saw stop markets. Before I get any boos from the peanut gallery, all I have to say this. Care to pit a saw stop saw against a martin? Didnt think so.

    I have used your PM 66 before and its a great saw for that size class. It is a bit light weight for my tastes however.

    As to the comments by Mr. Rogowski. I think Mr. Rogowski should be ashamed of himself for being so loose with his lips. The reason I can type faster than a secretary is that I have developed software for years but also because I type with all TEN digits. The reason they are still attached is that I follow the rules and respect the machine. This topic is not open to debate. There are rules of the road for using table saws that have been developed through 100 plus years of use. You need to find some books and take some courses on using the table saw. This applies if your using a PM 66 or a Saw Stop Saw. Dont allow yourself to be lulled into a sense of false security because you may have a saw stop saw. You are and will always be your first line of defense. Start acting like it.

    The saw stop saw is a tiny saw. Consider what it feels like to drive a saw with a 16 or 18 inch blade and a 1.25 inch to 1.5 inch arbor? But when you find out that the blade retracts into the belly of the machine and that you can rip a board while at the same time keeping a nickel on edge, then you know why we like these machines. They were designed for a 100 years and with a new set of bearings will embark on a second lifetime.

    Should you sell your PM 66 and buy a saw stop saw? That is up to you. I personally would not at this time. But if your not comfortable with a table saw and not fully dialed into the rules of using one, then maybe you should buy one. Its great first saw for someone just starting out in woodworking. But is very expensive for what you get and I consider it a bit dated in comparison to some of the european saws. See Pual's C. posts on his euro slider.
    Had the dog not stopped to go to the bathroom, he would have caught the rabbit.

  6. #6
    Welcome Aboard Bob...



    I think Mr. Rogowski should be ashamed of himself for being so loose with his lips.


    Dev.
    Mr Rogowski should be given a price for speaking out about
    the table saw reality.
    And the reality is ...
    .."There are rules of the road for using table saws that have been developed through 100 plus years of use..."
    that you need more than a life time of luck to master the monster.


    I forget to ask the guy next to me if he was using a Sears or a Martin cutting few of his fingers.
    but I knew it. It wasn't a saw stop.




    This topic is not open to debate.
    OK.

    Don't allow yourself to be lulled into a sense of false security because you may have a saw stop saw. You are and will always be your first line of defense. Start acting like it.


    Just use your brain.
    Imagine yourself cutting with your hands few inches from the blade and you're about to sneeze.

    And think about the answer from Dev..... if the saw stop was invented by Martin or Hoffman.

    Good luck.

  7. #7
    Bob

    Welcome to the Creek. I hope that you get lots of information from here and that at least some of it is useful to you in the wonderful world of woodworking.

    I don't have a Sawstop. They are not (yet) available in the UK. If they were and I was buying a new TS it would quite possibly be a Sawstop. If they fitted the technology to a saw with a "euro" slider it would definitely be a Sawstop.

    Everybody has their own opinions on which machines are best and they all merit listening to. But in the end the assessment has to be made against what you want top get out of it. Dev has a tendency to see the world in an aircraft carrier scale because he is a full blown all weather ocean going woodworker. Many other people are "taking a nice turn round the lake on a sunny day" woodworkers and for them a good quality dinghy is the better choice. To push this rather weak analogy, the Sawstop has positive bouyancy built in. You are much much less likely to drown in it but you can still get wet and look a chump.

    Now - what Mr Rogowski says in his class. He has a very valid point. The tablesaw is a machine fraught with risk which needs to be treated with great respect. I spend about 15 hours in an average week pushing wood through mine and try hard to make myself think of each cut as a unique event which has a unique capacity to do me harm. Dev is right that there are reasonably straightforward rules which make it a much safer experience. The same can be said of driving an automobile but at least some of us believe that the introduction of safety features like seat belts, airbags and ABS braking has been a good thing. That is where I see the technology on the Sawstop fitting. Seat belts don't make me a lazy or feckless driver, they just make me a safer occupant of a moving mass of metal.

    Now the $64K question - should you change? If the tablesaw makes you nervous and the Sawstop will make you less nervous you probably should. Just the simple fact of being less nervous will make you safer. If you are not particularly nervous but just feel that it is better to be "safer" then you might be just as well to spend a little time and money getting used to the "rules of the road" which will massively reduce the risks and give you a better sense of control of this important piece of equipment.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
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    Bob,

    Since you're asking for opinions, I'll give you mine also. I wouldn't replace the PM66 with a SawStop. If you chose to buy a SawStop, that's fine.

    I don't agree with Mr. Rogonowski's statement that "odds are sooner or later the saw will bite you". I will say that - if you're not careful with every cut - you increase the odds that you will get hurt.

    At $4K, you're into the price range where you can get an entry level european sliding table saw (probably need to add another grand or so, realistically talking about a starting point of $5K). That's where you really can look at saving digits because your fingers never need to get close to the blade.

    Rob

  9. #9
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    Jan 2004
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    Lewiston, Idaho
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    Bob.....Welcome to the Creek! You have asked the question that will and has in the past gotten very many comments! You can probably do a search on saw stop and find some of the past threads where this subject was beaten to death and then the bones were beaten to shards! Good luck with your decision!
    Ken

    So much to learn, so little time.....

  10. #10

    You bet

    Bob,

    Welcome.

    Sawstop, yes sir. When we get around to building the new shop

    and moving, we will buy another. We make our living in the woodworking

    business, which amounts to daily use of this saw. (by three people)

    It would be silly for us not to use this technology.

    I have written some initial thoughts here, http://www.sawmillcreek.org/showthre...hlight=sawstop

    If you have any further questions feel free to e-mail.

    Per
    "all men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night....wake in the day to find that it was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible."
    T.E. Lawrence

  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Rob Russell
    Bob,



    I don't agree with Mr. Rogonowski's statement that "odds are sooner or later the saw will bite you". I will say that - if you're not careful with every cut - you increase the odds that you will get hurt.

    Rob.
    I think mr R.statement and yours is the same.
    Keeping in mind that the machine don't think and we can't be perfect forever. Even machines malfunction.


    At $4K, you're into the price range where you can get an entry level european sliding table saw (probably need to add another grand or so, realistically talking about a starting point of $5K). That's where you really can look at saving digits because your fingers never need to get close to the blade.

    The ESFTS offers many safety features and versatility.
    I use one for years and I love it.
    But you can't do all your cuts with the slider
    .

    I think the Manufactures of the ESFTS should adapt the saw-stop technology and get done with it.
    Or have a small saw stop for the dangerous cuts.




    Rob
    Can you help me here and tell me how you do your rip cuts with your slider?
    Thanks Rob.

    YCF Dino
    Last edited by Dino Makropoulos; 11-19-2005 at 9:23 AM.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Lewiston, Idaho
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    28,565
    Bob......do an advanced search using saw stop as the words and you'll find hours of reading about saw stop saws.....and hundreds of opinions and view points.

    My advice.....if you feel that replacing the PM with a saw stop will make you feel safer and enjoy wood working more......if you can handle the financials of same.....BY ALL MEANS DO IT!

    If you do an advanced search using saw stop as the seach words you'll see that several members here have that saw and most if not all were extremely happy with it.

    It's important that You feel comfortable working with a saw.....If you feel you need a sawstop........GO FOR IT!

    Good luck with your decision!

    PS..........I don't own a sawstop...have never seen one.....don't intend on owning one.....
    Last edited by Ken Fitzgerald; 11-19-2005 at 10:13 AM.
    Ken

    So much to learn, so little time.....

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
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    Brentwood & Altamont, TN
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    Hi Bob,

    I agree with some of the other posters, if a Saw Stop will help you work wood with greater comfort and peace of mind, then it is the right saw for you. It was recently reviewed by a couple of the woodworking magazines and they said it was a decent saw, with an overpriced fence and that on at least one occasion during evaluations, the stop mechanism misfired while using a dado attachment.

    As for Dev's comments; I simply don't know what to think. I know this is politically incorrect to challange someone but, Dev seems to be all talk. He knows everything about every tool ever made and owns every great machine on earth (but you never see them in use...). He is cabinet maker to the stars so, he can't show you any of the work he's ever done. On the other hand, he does seem very knowledgable about some of the older equipment. I certainly can't quote you line and verse thet statistics about every machine ever made but, Dev can...

    I have always considered the PM66 a truely great table saw and many aspire to own one. I don't think the saw Stop table saw will be a better saw than your PM66 however, it may be safer.

  14. #14
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    Nov 2004
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    MA. & CA.
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    I own a SawStop...

    and love it! It is very well made, and has some nice safety features.....but it costs more $$$$. I find the customer care department at SawStop is first-class as well....
    Phil

  15. #15
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    Oct 2005
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    Sumter, SC
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    There has to be a safer way than the table saw. The other day I was doing some kitchen remodeling on site and had to do a couple risky cuts. I actually had to stand back and relax a few minutes to get enough nerve to make the cuts. Next time my Easy smart guide will be on the truck and I can keep my hands away from the blade.

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