Jacob":2ql9qtrb said:
DennisCA":2ql9qtrb said:
.... The safety feature that stays on the saw is the safety feature that is better, the safety feature that ends up on the shelf after being too much in the way, is no safety feature at all.
But:
1 aren't you talking of taking yours off because it gets in the way?
I can't see where Dennis said this (in this thread anyway), he said the current boom mounted guard was too space hungry.
Jacob":2ql9qtrb said:
2 Your safety feature will be fixed to the ceiling and will not stay with the saw if you move it.
So does that mean that if the saw is in a fixed position a guard independent of the riving knife and which can therefore stay in place for non-through cuts is ultimately a theoretically better solution? I say theoretically because clearly there are also practical considerations such as the strength, etc. of the particular guard installation.
I'm pretty knew to woodworking and the saw I bought second hand did not have the riving knife or guard fitted when I picked it up (no idea if that was how last owner used saw or if it was just removed for my collection). I used it a couple of times and did not feel that safe, so I put the riving knife and guard on. I found the guard a complete PITA as I couldn't see what I was doing (happy to concede it may have been my positioning of guard that was the issue) so it came off almost immediately. On the other hand I do not like working without the riving knife and yesterday in particular it was on and off multiple times.
I'm keen to understand what the safest approach is, but it is hard to disagree with Dennis that a safety feature is only doing any good when it remains fitted.
Terry.