Rick Lee wrote:Just saw this:
"This week, news emerged that Consumer Products Safety Commission Chairwoman Inez Tenenbaum has directed her staff to draft a new tablesaw safety regulation package, which will be released for public comment in September. Does this mean we're one step closer to higher tool prices? Who knows? The fact of the matter is that opinions differ widely, regarding exactly how much SawStop-style technology would add to the base price of a tablesaw. While SawStop inventor Steve Gass puts the cost at about $100 per unit, other industry insiders beg to differ. And quite frankly, they're not too keen on having to pay Gass and his crew for the licensing. Case in point: Bosch, which is trumpeting its own newly designed blade guards before the feds. According to Bosch representatives, their new breed of tablesaw blade guard is hands-down, infinitely better than the old school guards so many woodworkers habitually take off their saws the moment they assemble them."
Here come the feds!
The industry has been losing lawsuits. Last year Ryobi lost a several million dollar suit for fingers, because they don't have it on the saw. It's their own damn fault. He shopped his tech to all of them. Every last one turned it down. So he started his own saw company. Have you ever seen a guard that was not in the way at some point? I swore to leave mine on when I got my new jet a couple of years ago. That lasted all of two days.