Steve Maskery
Established Member
Afternoon everyone. We haven't had a DADO thread for ages, have we?
I'm being very brave (or foolhardy, whichever way you wish to interpret it) and filming a sequence about dado heads on tablesaws. Now I'm pretty sure I know the score, but I thought I'd just ring up the HSE and make sure I wasn't making too much of a rod for my own back here. So I spoke to Very Nice Young Lady (actually I've no idea how old she was, but let's give her the benefit of the doubt, shall we?).
"I'd like a definitive stand on the use of dado heads in tablesaws, please."
"Well the legislation is open to interpretation, sir."
Terrific. If I can't get a definitive answer from the HSE, who can I turn to?
Anyway, I explained what I wanted and why, and half an hour later I was called by Cliff, who was very helpful indeed.
We talked about the issues and he asked if I'd seen the video clips on the HSE website.
"Ah," says I, "you mean the ones where guards have been removed for clarity?"
"Well, people wouldn't be able to see anything, otherwise", he mumbled, defensively. Anyway I don't want to knock him, he was genuinely very helpful.
So in short:
1 Dado heads must be chip limiting in design
2 They must be guarded
3 The saw must still stop within 10 seconds
4 The workpiece must be properly supported throughout the cut
and that's pretty much it. Of course, some of those are not easy to achieve with the guard supplied with the machine, and most machines don't come with a long arbor anyway, and many machines are underpowered for a stack, so those issues may also prevent the use of a dado head on a TS, but in terms of the legislation itself, the above is what matters.
Straight from the horse's mouth.
Anyone seen Scrit lately?
Cheers
Steve
I'm being very brave (or foolhardy, whichever way you wish to interpret it) and filming a sequence about dado heads on tablesaws. Now I'm pretty sure I know the score, but I thought I'd just ring up the HSE and make sure I wasn't making too much of a rod for my own back here. So I spoke to Very Nice Young Lady (actually I've no idea how old she was, but let's give her the benefit of the doubt, shall we?).
"I'd like a definitive stand on the use of dado heads in tablesaws, please."
"Well the legislation is open to interpretation, sir."
Terrific. If I can't get a definitive answer from the HSE, who can I turn to?
Anyway, I explained what I wanted and why, and half an hour later I was called by Cliff, who was very helpful indeed.
We talked about the issues and he asked if I'd seen the video clips on the HSE website.
"Ah," says I, "you mean the ones where guards have been removed for clarity?"
"Well, people wouldn't be able to see anything, otherwise", he mumbled, defensively. Anyway I don't want to knock him, he was genuinely very helpful.
So in short:
1 Dado heads must be chip limiting in design
2 They must be guarded
3 The saw must still stop within 10 seconds
4 The workpiece must be properly supported throughout the cut
and that's pretty much it. Of course, some of those are not easy to achieve with the guard supplied with the machine, and most machines don't come with a long arbor anyway, and many machines are underpowered for a stack, so those issues may also prevent the use of a dado head on a TS, but in terms of the legislation itself, the above is what matters.
Straight from the horse's mouth.
Anyone seen Scrit lately?
Cheers
Steve