by tk » Thu Mar 24, 2011 6:44 pm
I'm a cabinetmaker by trade. I've worked with table saws on a regular basis for most of my adult life and on a daily basis for the last fifteen or so years. When I first became aware of Sawstop technology, I poo-pooed it like many others I've heard, and I still don't think it is good engineering. (It's too expensive to buy and too expensive to engage. HOWEVER, it's the best available at the moment.) I tended to blame carelessness and/or inexperience for injuries. When a young fellow at our plant recently completely severed a thumb, I rethought my position.
This is where I now stand: Just guessing but I would bet that the cost of replacing ALL the ten or so table saws in our plant with Sawstops is probably less than the cost of the initial surgery to reattach the boy's thumb. That does not include hospitalization, additional therapy, additional bone graft surgery, settlement with the young man, etc., etc. If I were setting up a new cabinet shop today, I WOULD BUY NOTHING BUT SAWSTOP table saws. It doesn't make any difference if it is an incident of carelessness, if it is the fault of an inexperienced worker, if it is an act of God, if it is poor engineering, or if the inventor is indeed a greedy so-and-so, it simply doesn't make good economic sense to buy anything else for a commercial setting. Additionally, if I could afford it at the moment, I would be replacing the saw in my home shop with a Sawstop, post-haste. I hate to think of the consequences for my family if I have an accident in my own shop.
Just my two cents.
Best,
Tom
Escape to Missouri