This brings back memories of the job we done on the council, back in the early 80s! Whole ground floor removed, from graded listed building due to a flood, and taken back to mill where, after lengthy decisions with health and safety chap, it was decided to cut the bitumen remnants off using the rip saw. (flooded building had been dried out with industrial dehumidifiers for the previous 6 months so blocks dry) It took some setting up and ingenuity, as both crown guard and riving knife had to be removed to accommodate the new, sacrificial wood padded, spring pressure guard arrangement. Pressure guards were set in the "t" slot of table, to left of blade, in front and behind blade. That workpiece was fully held and covered through feed in, cut, and outfeed. Machine started up and blade brought up slowly into pressure pad to the predetermined height. The cut was set to the minimum loss on stock cutting mainly into the bitumen with the lack of the smell of burning tar surprising all left in the mill/joinery shop, good extraction to seperate building probably helped. No-one counted the pieces but it was estimated to be well over a thousand, two full days with both machinists taking it in turns the feed and stack. I dont think that will be allowed to happen now! Blade survived too, though it took some soaking in paraffin to get the muck off! Never saw the finished job.