guineafowl21
Established Member
Nasty. You have my sympathies.
With 20/20 hindsight, your left hand should not have been anywhere near 3” from the blade, nor pushing sideways so as to pinch the kerf at the end of cut.
I lay the push stick to the right of the fence, and start feeding with both hands.
Once the timber engages the riving knife (essential fitting), you can keep your left hand behind the edge of the saw table. Feed applied by right hand, almost like a snooker shot.
As ’my’ end of the workpiece crosses the edge of the table, the push stick is used by right hand to finish the cut, left hand stays behind the edge.
Easier to demonstrate than describe. Basically, my left hand is always close enough to the near table edge to hook my thumb around. Some advocate two push sticks, which I respect but is not for me.
With 20/20 hindsight, your left hand should not have been anywhere near 3” from the blade, nor pushing sideways so as to pinch the kerf at the end of cut.
I lay the push stick to the right of the fence, and start feeding with both hands.
Once the timber engages the riving knife (essential fitting), you can keep your left hand behind the edge of the saw table. Feed applied by right hand, almost like a snooker shot.
As ’my’ end of the workpiece crosses the edge of the table, the push stick is used by right hand to finish the cut, left hand stays behind the edge.
Easier to demonstrate than describe. Basically, my left hand is always close enough to the near table edge to hook my thumb around. Some advocate two push sticks, which I respect but is not for me.
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