I watch all I can, which for the tablesaw is pretty much required reading/watching,
seeing as so many, especially across the pond, have a terrible attitude towards safety,
and hold a place in their hearts for unsafe machinery.
Those guys and the hot dog sawyers youtubers have clogged the internet.
Roy Sutton made a video, probably in the 80's.. "safe wood machining" on YT
which is amusing to see how many folk don't play by the rules,
or infact dismiss them for various reasons...
I think a good dose of seeing other accidents is required for one who makes excuses,
of which there are many...
want for space, cost, time, you name it.
I make no such excuses, oooh I can't be at that malarkey for months,
Expect to loose yer fingers then, for the machine would have no sympathy for you,
so why would one have sympathy for it, if it's not up to spec in that regards.
And worth noting, those rules change, like the floating crown guard being mandatory nowadays.
Working on getting my saw up to date, isn't a stroll in the park, to do well, that is.
Take the ubiquitous TS 275 with the American style twin rail full length fence,
with no provisions for an extrusion.
Be a shame/adventure to go drilling the fence, but it's junk otherwise if it can't be made safe.
I don't think there will be a museum full of these things, but yet the mention of such distasteful
bodgery might irk some folk.
Going back to the bandsaw, what happens if a blade comes flying out of the machine,
I've seen quite a few mentions of this before, likely a problematic machine might be reason,
i.e what's not a Centauro CO that can actually be set up accurately....
but, if proven that being not the issue, and that a blade can still exit the machine,
it could make a change to the HSE advice.
Don't see many folk using the other side of the fence, but I question if that's the reason.
So yeah, perhaps those youtubers,
the honest ones, that is...
(some dishonest unscrupulous YT'ers business models are based on bad advise to get folks hurt)
might get enough stick from doing unsafe things, that they won't do anything but,
and that's where we can learn...
For those who need to see to believe. eventually there will be an index of things,
of what might be a lesson for the complacent, been doing this all my life until yesterday types.