EscapingScreens
Member
Hello,
So I had a bit of a scare last week, I'm not 100% sure what happened, but I think a small piece got caught in the plate and shot off like a bullet. I was using a blade guard and riving knife, but I think the (awful) wood I was cutting split near a knot. No harm done this time. However, I noticed how awful the positioning the off switch is on my saw when I was trying to turn it off while in a bit of a panic. It's recessed, which now seems absolutely idiotic.
The saw lives on a cart, so I was thinking of adding a beefier switch in a more sensible position with a chuffing great button I can whack without thinking. From the replacement switch that's available, it looks like a standard 4 connector spade switch. I'd like to do this "properly", but I wanted to check for opinions.
Option 1: Get a pre-wired one like this. However, then I have two "on" switches, which seems daft.
Option 2: Remove the existing switch, cover the hole with a blanking plate and extend the wires to something like this.
I'm leaning towards option 2, but I'd be interested to see if anyone had an alternative, or strong opinion.
Thanks in advance.
So I had a bit of a scare last week, I'm not 100% sure what happened, but I think a small piece got caught in the plate and shot off like a bullet. I was using a blade guard and riving knife, but I think the (awful) wood I was cutting split near a knot. No harm done this time. However, I noticed how awful the positioning the off switch is on my saw when I was trying to turn it off while in a bit of a panic. It's recessed, which now seems absolutely idiotic.
The saw lives on a cart, so I was thinking of adding a beefier switch in a more sensible position with a chuffing great button I can whack without thinking. From the replacement switch that's available, it looks like a standard 4 connector spade switch. I'd like to do this "properly", but I wanted to check for opinions.
Option 1: Get a pre-wired one like this. However, then I have two "on" switches, which seems daft.
Option 2: Remove the existing switch, cover the hole with a blanking plate and extend the wires to something like this.
I'm leaning towards option 2, but I'd be interested to see if anyone had an alternative, or strong opinion.
Thanks in advance.