I am not sure there is a distinction. I watched the video and I am not pursuaded. I would define kickback as any thing where the saw blade is able to cause the material being cut to be driven with force back towards the operator. Whether the cause of it is the material being caught on the back of a tooth by the lip between the plate and tooth or being free to ride the top of the blade, is immaterial save for the trajectory. From an outcome point of view in either case a piece of wood is heading towards you at in excess of 80mph and at best you are 1 yard away. Whether it hits or misses is more luck than judgement.transatlantic":2ksa2crn said:Steve Maskery":2ksa2crn said:And to say that you CAN'T have kickback if you use a RK was disproven by me just a couple of weeks ago.
He distinguishes between kickback and ejection, ... your case sounded more like ejection?
The latter can be virtually eliminated by always having a riving knife fitted and an effective Crown Guard where ever possible.
A fully enclosed Crown Guard will reduce the first instance as the material is held to some extent by the Crown Guard. I have a SUVA (Swiss Insurance Industry approved Crown Guard) because they fully enclose the blade and the weight of the guard presses down on the material so it is not free to take flight. The SUVA also allows better dust extraction.