This is going to be an aftermarket add on for "most any tables aw" that also has a version to work with band saws. They appear to be in a crowdfunding stage right now but claim they'll be shipping products in the first half of 2021. The site is pretty slim on the details.
Another potential SawStop Competitor
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$349 pre production order price. Not cheap. At least it doesn't eat your sawblade.
But other than that I got no useful info out of that website.Loring in Katy, TX USA
If your only tool is a hammer, you tend to treat all problems as if they were nails.
BT3 FAQ - https://www.sawdustzone.org/forum/di...sked-questions
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I welcome competition and hope they come up with some good products. Accessing the problem, making a spinning saw blade safe, is almost an impossible problem. I can see how other attempts failed. I can’t remember where I read it, but I think I read the attempt to make the band saw safe is some kind of auto deploying blade guard. Totally different from the Saw Stop. Saw Stops solution was absolutely brilliant and was probably not invented by someone who had any concern for the outcome of the equipment. What better way to protect someone’s finger from a spinning blade than jamming a hunk of soft metal into the blade to instantly stop it! When Saw Stop first came out the thought of having to replace its cartridge and a destroyed blade seemed like a high price, but then the potential medical cost, time lost and discomfort added up to many many, times the cost of a cartridge and a blade.
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Originally posted by LCHIEN View Post$349 pre production order price. Not cheap. At least it doesn't eat your sawblade.
But other than that I got no useful info out of that website.
My guess is that it is something like a disc brake caliper and squeezes the body of the blade to stop it, without contacting the teeth.--------------------------------------------------
Electrical Engineer by day, Woodworker by night
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Originally posted by woodturner View Post
But you still have to replace a $70 cartridge each time it trips :-(
My guess is that it is something like a disc brake caliper and squeezes the body of the blade to stop it, without contacting the teeth.
And the video clip shows it stopping the blade almost 1" shy of actual contact... That means its susceptible to unintended tripping.
Loring in Katy, TX USA
If your only tool is a hammer, you tend to treat all problems as if they were nails.
BT3 FAQ - https://www.sawdustzone.org/forum/di...sked-questions
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I plan on buying a SawStop ore something with similar safety tech in the next couple of years as budget allows for it. I'm always curious about the concern for the cost of tripping a device like this. I would expect that most users never trip this safety system so the cost is irrelevant. If you are tripping it multiple times, then you've thrown basic safety to the wind and are depending on technology to keep you safe instead. It's very similar to people with 4 wheel drive who think they can safely drive 70MPH in a snow storm.
On the other hand, $200 to save a finger or my hand is a bargain. $200 on false positive activation would annoy me.Chr's
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An ethical man knows the right thing to do.
A moral man does it.
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Originally posted by twistsol View PostI plan on buying a SawStop ore something with similar safety tech in the next couple of years as budget allows for it. I'm always curious about the concern for the cost of tripping a device like this. I would expect that most users never trip this safety system so the cost is irrelevant. If you are tripping it multiple times, then you've thrown basic safety to the wind and are depending on technology to keep you safe instead. It's very similar to people with 4 wheel drive who think they can safely drive 70MPH in a snow storm.
On the other hand, $200 to save a finger or my hand is a bargain. $200 on false positive activation would annoy me.
Personally, I would rather use the guards on the saw and follow good practices to be safe. I've never met anyone who was injured by a saw and was using the guards. The problem seem to be that people take off the guards, and I suspect people who would take off the guards are also likely to disable the safety feature.--------------------------------------------------
Electrical Engineer by day, Woodworker by night
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