- Jun 19, 2003
- 9,646
- 1
- 0
Long gone are the days of the shop teacher w/ 3 fingers on his left hand..
what would happen if you needed to cut through a hot dog?!?! such a worthless saw!
The SawStop system works by recognizing the difference in the electrical properties of wood and a user. The system induces a high-frequency electrical signal on the blade of a table saw and monitors this signal for changes caused by contact between the blade and a user's body. The signal remains unchanged when the blade cuts wood because of the relatively small inherent electrical capacitance and conductivity of wood. However, when a user contacts the blade while the saw is operating, the electrical signal changes because of the relatively large inherent capacitance of the user's body. The image to the left shows the SawStop system detecting each tooth of a saw blade as it contacts a user's finger.
Windows Media Player
Quicktime
Windows
Media Player Quicktime
The SawStop system detects this change in the electrical signal and immediately forces a brake into
the teeth of the blade. The brake absorbs the energy of the blade, bringing the blade to a complete stop in approximately 5 milliseconds. To see high-speed, close-up videos of the SawStop system stopping the blade of a table saw, click on the links to the right.
In the videos, the saw blade is rotating at 4000 rpm. The blade is stopped in less than 5 milliseconds. It can make the difference between needing a Band-Aid or a hand surgeon.
what would happen if you needed to cut through a hot dog?!?! such a worthless saw!
The SawStop system works by recognizing the difference in the electrical properties of wood and a user. The system induces a high-frequency electrical signal on the blade of a table saw and monitors this signal for changes caused by contact between the blade and a user's body. The signal remains unchanged when the blade cuts wood because of the relatively small inherent electrical capacitance and conductivity of wood. However, when a user contacts the blade while the saw is operating, the electrical signal changes because of the relatively large inherent capacitance of the user's body. The image to the left shows the SawStop system detecting each tooth of a saw blade as it contacts a user's finger.
Windows Media Player
Quicktime
Windows
Media Player Quicktime
The SawStop system detects this change in the electrical signal and immediately forces a brake into
the teeth of the blade. The brake absorbs the energy of the blade, bringing the blade to a complete stop in approximately 5 milliseconds. To see high-speed, close-up videos of the SawStop system stopping the blade of a table saw, click on the links to the right.
In the videos, the saw blade is rotating at 4000 rpm. The blade is stopped in less than 5 milliseconds. It can make the difference between needing a Band-Aid or a hand surgeon.
