I still wouldn't want to stick my finger in a moving saw blade
Ballsy
[QUOTE=thispieiscold;28751450]I still wouldn't want to stick my finger in a moving saw blade[/QUOTE]
It's not supposed to make you want to.
Balls of steeeel
I was hoping for more of a authentic demonstration where he tries to cut wood with this thumb way out in the way of the saw and watch it snap out of the way but oh well.
[editline]22nd March 2011[/editline]
[QUOTE=Occlusion;28751822]Balls of steeeel[/QUOTE]
he really just barely inched the tip of his finger to the saw, I wonder what the max speed without drawing blood would be.
What about some workshops that give their workers gloves?
I know of one that gives gloves that also don't conduct electricity (it has many different machines there, it's a small company)
God damn that made me cringe.
I cringed the fuck out when I saw they were going to put him through it.
I wish they would have thrown a hot dog at it or something
[QUOTE=wewt!;28752013]What about some workshops that give their workers gloves?
I know of one that gives gloves that also don't conduct electricity (it has many different machines there, it's a small company)[/QUOTE]
It would cut through the glove and stop at the finger. Wearing a glove does not make your flesh nonconductive.
I miss this show :smith:
Didn't they have a episode where a hot chick gets a water balloon on her? Can someone link us :pervert: people to it?
old. not new at all.
Very old. We've had these in my woodshop class for nearly 4 years.
[editline]22nd March 2011[/editline]
It senses electrical conductivity, so loose screws, very humid wood, and skin will set it off. It's fucking scary when it drops too.
Couldn't it just quickly drop the saw and let it spin out safely underneath the table? It'll still be spinning at dangerous speeds as it descends, but if it descends as fast as it does in the clip then it would be out of the way incredibly fast.
I guess this way is a bit safer though, at the cost of ruining your saw.
[QUOTE=lorden;28756392]Couldn't it just quickly drop the saw and let it spin out safely underneath the table? It'll still be spinning at dangerous speeds as it descends, but if it descends as fast as it does in the clip then it would be out of the way incredibly fast.
I guess this way is a bit safer though, at the cost of ruining your saw.[/QUOTE]
From what I understand, it descents because it stops. The sheer force of the stop brings it down. Without the stop you wouldn't have anything to bring it away fast enough.
My wood shop teacher has one
All of the table saws in my woodshop have the SawStop. It's not new.
My wood shop got this 2 years ago.
Our school has one. One day they decided to cut mirrored lexan, turns out the metal used in the mirroring is conductive. :saddowns:
What if I wanted to somebodies else hands? not for nefarious purposes of course..
My woodshop class didn't have these.
I didn't have a woodshop.
Suddenly everyone on Facepunch takes woodshop :colbert:
[QUOTE=collegegrad;28758957]Suddenly everyone on Facepunch takes woodshop :colbert:[/QUOTE]
I've been wanting to for a while but I'm home schooled.
:saddowns:
I dunno man
60 dollars to replace all that?
I have a feeling some idiot is gonna try getting his hands on this (or already has) just to prove the creator wrong. Let's say, by slamming his hand straight down over the blade as quickly as he can.
[editline]22nd March 2011[/editline]
[QUOTE=Hesychasmos;28759126]I dunno man
60 dollars to replace all that?[/QUOTE]
I'd rather spend $60 to replace the saw and stopping mechanism than spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars on a hospital bill to have my finger put back on, or lose the finger(s) altogether.
[QUOTE=deadoctober;28757942][b]What if I wanted to somebodies else hands?[/b] not for nefarious purposes of course..[/QUOTE]
:what:
late
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