siggy_7
Full time tool collector, part time woodworker
First and foremost, glad to see that Steve has not suffered more serious injury than he did. Top marks for sharing his experience also. I had a recent unfortunate incident with my TS that I have not had the courage to come on here and discuss, mainly because of the self-righteous nature of the responses I am sure that would elicit. Off the back of this, I have bought Steve's Table Saw DVD set with the explicit aim of building a SUVA type guard for my saw.
Aside from a couple of safety deficiencies that Steve has pointed out with a typical crown guard fixed to the riving knife, there is one big problem with this type of guard - they prevent anything other than severing cuts. The riving knife has to extend above the height of the blade to support them without losing depth of cut, so if you have this type of guard normally fitted then you have to take the guard off (normally easy) but also the riving knife needs to be adjusted/removed and replaced with one that matches the top of the blade. My riving knife wouldn't adjust down far enough, so I made a different one that I have set with the top of the blade. Removing and realigning an RK is a pain on most saws, so in practice the fact that these types of guards prevent a lot of cuts from being made means they are taken off and never re-fitted. Anything that is a significant operational inconvenience conflicts with the realities of people who want to get things done. The difficulty in re-fitting the RK increases the risk that in practice they are never used. If people want to be in denial about reality that's their perogative, but it doesn't advance safety - what is needed is a guard that works for the full range of cuts that will be attempted, or a number of guards that are easy to swap out that work well for the different operations. Crown guards fail both of these tests.
I really don't see what the problem with a sturdily mounted and correctly set up SUVA guard is. As far as I can tell they are standard on the better, more industrial machinery on offer from the likes of Altendorf, Felder et al, so they must have something going for them. Steve has clearly come a cropper because his own guard wasn't adjusted correctly, not because of a shortcoming in the concept.
I have a sliding table format type saw, which only tilts right but can only have the fence on the right. Someone mentioned a jig that improves the safety of a bevelled cut for people with this limitation - if they would be so kind as to put a link into this thread I would be grateful. I would always use a short fence for this operation anyway, but this thread has got me thinking that may not necessarily be enough.
Aside from a couple of safety deficiencies that Steve has pointed out with a typical crown guard fixed to the riving knife, there is one big problem with this type of guard - they prevent anything other than severing cuts. The riving knife has to extend above the height of the blade to support them without losing depth of cut, so if you have this type of guard normally fitted then you have to take the guard off (normally easy) but also the riving knife needs to be adjusted/removed and replaced with one that matches the top of the blade. My riving knife wouldn't adjust down far enough, so I made a different one that I have set with the top of the blade. Removing and realigning an RK is a pain on most saws, so in practice the fact that these types of guards prevent a lot of cuts from being made means they are taken off and never re-fitted. Anything that is a significant operational inconvenience conflicts with the realities of people who want to get things done. The difficulty in re-fitting the RK increases the risk that in practice they are never used. If people want to be in denial about reality that's their perogative, but it doesn't advance safety - what is needed is a guard that works for the full range of cuts that will be attempted, or a number of guards that are easy to swap out that work well for the different operations. Crown guards fail both of these tests.
I really don't see what the problem with a sturdily mounted and correctly set up SUVA guard is. As far as I can tell they are standard on the better, more industrial machinery on offer from the likes of Altendorf, Felder et al, so they must have something going for them. Steve has clearly come a cropper because his own guard wasn't adjusted correctly, not because of a shortcoming in the concept.
I have a sliding table format type saw, which only tilts right but can only have the fence on the right. Someone mentioned a jig that improves the safety of a bevelled cut for people with this limitation - if they would be so kind as to put a link into this thread I would be grateful. I would always use a short fence for this operation anyway, but this thread has got me thinking that may not necessarily be enough.