jon joseph
Member
Does any one know where I can get a longer saw arbor for my startrite 275ds , so I can use a dado blade thanks
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Saw table safety is covered by a range of systems - but three key ones are fast stopping of blade rotation, a riving knife to limit jams and kickbacks and a solid blade guard. Dado stacks negate all three, with the added hazard of the braking system more likely to lead to the blade becoming unscrewed do to trying to stop the increased mass. At least router tables and spindle moulders are designed for the job.Slightly off topic sorry, but @sploo why is a dado stack trying to kill you? Not being provocative, they seem to be frowned upon and I don’t understand why. I can see they can’t be used with a riving knife and guard, and they are a much greater mass so if they got off the arbor would create much mayhem. Is this it or is there other things I’m missing?
My Electra Bekum saw bench with it's 12" standard blade takes about 2 minutes to stop completely. I guess they just don't trust us here in the UK, no problem in the USA though?Saw table safety is covered by a range of systems - but three key ones are fast stopping of blade rotation, a riving knife to limit jams and kickbacks and a solid blade guard. Dado stacks negate all three, with the added hazard of the braking system more likely to lead to the blade becoming unscrewed do to trying to stop the increased mass. At least router tables and spindle moulders are designed for the job.
As noted by others; mass is a major issue (they're going to take a lot longer to spin down), plus if the saw wasn't designed to start/stop that extra load it might not do it much good.Slightly off topic sorry, but @sploo why is a dado stack trying to kill you? Not being provocative, they seem to be frowned upon and I don’t understand why. I can see they can’t be used with a riving knife and guard, and they are a much greater mass so if they got off the arbor would create much mayhem. Is this it or is there other things I’m missing?
The startright was , with the extra bits designed to take 8 x 4 sheets and if I wanted to put a grove in a 8x4 I would use my cnc, this is only for small work and after 40+ years as a cabinet maker I think I can make sure it’s safe mateAs noted by others; mass is a major issue (they're going to take a lot longer to spin down), plus if the saw wasn't designed to start/stop that extra load it might not do it much good.
Material can go for a "walk" on a router, but a dado stack on a tablesaw can really fling a board quite violently if control is lost - so on balance the router is likely to be less dangerous.
I read an article some years ago looking at tablesaw injury rates in the US, and it mentioned that injuries from dado stacks were especially unpleasant (the gist being that a saw blade often leaves something to sew back on, a dado stack doesn't).
I don't think I'd have a problem using a dado stack on a saw with appropriate guarding, but trying to retrofit a longer arbor to an existing saw doesn't sound like a good idea to me. Plus the Startrite 175/275 is relatively small, so despite being a great saw you wouldn't want to be trying to control an 8x4 "full" sheet over it, and that being true, it means working on sheet sizes that are more suited to a router table (or putting an 8x4' sheet on the floor and using a router handheld). A huge saw doing loads of long dado cuts on 8x4' sheets makes more sense, granted.
I'm questioning the process rather than the operator; a dado stack in a tablesaw has much higher potential to cause serious injury than a router table if an accident were to occur.The startright was , with the extra bits designed to take 8 x 4 sheets and if I wanted to put a grove in a 8x4 I would use my cnc, this is only for small work and after 40+ years as a cabinet maker I think I can make sure it’s safe mate
I thought owning a table saw which could accept a dado set was great at first but that soon wore off. A router and a decent jig versus swapping out blades, setting the width and height, making numerous test cuts and so on... the dado set just gathers dust now.
Not a motor expert by any means but wouldn't you have to account for the extra pressure from pushing down throwing the balance out and extra resistance between the stator and rotor by making it do something it wasn't designed to do?
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