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==How it works==
==How it works==
{{rquote|right|Stopping the blade...would require a two-part process. First, [Gass] needed a brake that would work quickly enough when it came into contact with a woodworker's hand. Next, he had to design a triggering system that could differentiate between finger and wood. Given the speed of the blade, it would have to stop in about 1/100 of a second &mdash; or at about an eighth of an inch of rotation after making contact. Any further, and the cut would be so deep that the device would be useless. To stop the blade this quickly would require about 1,000 pounds of force to decelerate the blade in 10 milliseconds.|[[Inc. (magazine)|''Inc.''magazine]] in 2005.<ref name="inc2005"/>}}
SawStop's saws applies a small amount of [[electric current]] to the blade of the saw. This current is continuously monitored. If the saw detects a change in this current (as would occur if a hand or other body part came into contact with the blade) an automatic braking system is activated, forcing an aluminum brake block into the blade. The saw stops within five milliseconds, and [[angular momentum]] lowers the blade into the table. The operator suffers a small nick instead of an amputation or other more serious injury.<ref name="cpsc2001"/>
SawStop's saws applies a small amount of [[electric current]] to the blade of the saw. This current is continuously monitored. If the saw detects a change in this current (as would occur if a hand or other body part came into contact with the blade) an automatic braking system is activated, forcing an aluminum brake block into the blade. The saw stops within five milliseconds, and [[angular momentum]] lowers the blade into the table. The operator suffers a small nick instead of an amputation or other more serious injury.<ref name="cpsc2001"/> The design takes advantage of the difference in "electrical capacitance and conductivity" between wood and flesh.<ref name="engrUK2001"/>

According to SawStop, there are restrictions and limitations:<ref name="ssfaq"/>
*The braking system must be deactivated when cutting very green or wet timber.
*Non-conductive blades or blades with non-conductive hubs or teeth cannot be used.
*The braking system is designed to work with [[wikt:kerf|kerfs]] from 3/32″ to 3/16″; using thinner or thicker kerfs limits the saw's ability to stop the blade after accidental contact, likely resulting in more serious injury.
*It is impractical to retrofit into existing table saws.<ref name="ssfaq"/>
Activating the braking system often damages one to two teeth on the blade.<ref name="ssfaq"/>


==History==
==History==
Steve Gass, an amateur woodworker with a doctorate in physics who worked as a patent attorney,<ref name="inc2005"/> came up with the idea for SawStop's braking system in 1999.<ref name="dreview2006"/> It took Gass two weeks to do the design, and a third week to build a prototype based on a "$200 secondhand table saw."<ref name="inc2005"/> After numerous tests using a [[hot dog]] as a finger substitute, in spring 2000, Gass conducted the first test with a real finger on himself: he applied [[Novocain]] to his left [[ring finger]], and after two false starts, he place his finger into the teeth of a whirring saw blade. The blade stopped as designed, and although it "hurt like the dickens and bled a lot," his finger remained intact.<ref name="inc2005"/>
{{Expand section|date=June 2011}}
Steve Gass came up with the idea for SawStop's braking system in 1999.<ref name="dreview2006"/> Gass first demonstrated a prototype in 2000, at a [[trade show]] called the International Woodworking Machinery and Furniture Supply Fair.<ref name="dreview2006"/>
SawStop, at the time consisting of "three guys out of a barn in [[Wilsonville, Oregon|Wilsonville]]", demonstrated a prototype in August 2000,<ref name="inc2005"/> at the International Woodworking Machinery and Furniture Supply Fair, a [[trade show]].<ref name="dreview2006"/> A series of meetings followed, where in an attempt to license his invention, Gass "negotiated with major players such as [[Ryobi]], [[Delta Machinery|Delta]], [[Black & Decker]], [[Emerson Electric Company|Emerson]], and [[Craftsman (tools)|Craftsman]]"; he followed up on those negotiations with a February 2001 presentation to the Defense Research Industry (a trade group for attorneys representing the power-tool industry).<ref name="inc2005"/> That presentation immediately preceded one by one from Dan Lanier, Black & Decker's national coordinating counsel, a presentation that gave Gass the impression he was unlikely to succeed in convincing major power tool manufacturers to license SawStop technology.<ref name="inc2005"/>


In July 2001, SawStop, which at the time was attempting to license its technology to [[power tool]] manufacturers, was awarded a safety commendation by the U.S. [[Consumer Product Safety Commission]] (CPSC) for "developing innovative safety technology for power saws intended to prevent finger amputations and other serious injuries."<ref name="cpsc2001"/>
In July 2001, SawStop was awarded a safety commendation by the U.S. [[Consumer Product Safety Commission]] (CPSC) for "developing innovative safety technology for power saws intended to prevent finger amputations and other serious injuries."<ref name="cpsc2001"/> In 2002 ''[[Popular Science]]'' named SawStop's technology one of its "100 Best New Innovations."<ref name="CPSCpet2003"/>


In January 2002, SawStop appeared to come close to a licensing agreement with [[Ryobi]], who agreed to terms that involved no up-front fee and a 3% royalty based on the wholesale price of all saws sold with SawStop's technology; the royalty would grow to 8% if most of the industry also licensed the technology.<ref name="inc2005"/> According to Gass, when a [[typographical error]] in the contract had not been resolved after six months of effort by Gass to get Ryobi to sign the proposed deal, Gass gave up on the effort in mid-2002.<ref name="inc2005"/> Some subsequent licensing negotiations were deadlocked when the manufacturers insisted that Gass should "indemnify them against any lawsuit if SawStop malfunctioned", something Gass wouldn't agree to since he would not be manufacturing the saws."<ref name="inc2005"/>
Citing statistics from 1998 that show accidents with table and bench saws resulted in 3000 amputations of one or more fingers, SawStop's braking technology inspired Representative [[Kevin Joyce (politician)|Kevin Joyce]] to propose the [[Illinois General Assembly]]'s 2005 Electrical Saw Safety Act<ref name="ila2005"/>

The failure to license it to Ryobi or other prompted SawStop to start their own company; over two years later, the company's first saw was produced by a Taiwanese manufacturing plant in November 2004; by 2005 SawStop had grown to "eight people out of a two-story barn Gass built himself."<ref name="inc2005"/>

Citing statistics that show accidents with table and bench saws resulted in 3000 amputations of one or more fingers, SawStop's technology inspired Representative [[Kevin Joyce (politician)|Kevin Joyce]] to propose the [[Illinois General Assembly]]'s 2005 Electrical Saw Safety Act<ref name="ila2005"/> The number of finger or hand amputations has more recently been estimated to be 4000,<ref name="busweek2011"/> costing more than $2 billion a year to treat victims.<ref name="inc2005"/><ref name="salon2011"/>


In June 2006, the CPSC recommended that the U.S. government begin the rulemaking process that could result in mandatory safety standards for table saws.
In June 2006, the CPSC recommended that the U.S. government begin the rulemaking process that could result in mandatory safety standards for table saws.


SawStop has provoked opposition from the [[Power Tool Institute]] (PTI), which represents [[Black & Decker]], [[Hilti]], [[Hitachi Koki U.S.A. Ltd.|Hitachi Koki]], [[Makita]], [[Metabo]], [[Robert Bosch GmbH|Bosch]], [[Techtronic Industries]] and [[WMH Tool Group]]. In April 2008 they told Congress that SawStop's braking system is:<ref name="HR4783object"/>
SawStop has provoked opposition from the [[Power Tool Institute]] (PTI),<ref name="busweek2011"/> which represents Black & Decker, [[Hilti]], [[Hitachi Koki U.S.A. Ltd.|Hitachi Koki]], [[Makita]], [[Metabo]], [[Robert Bosch GmbH|Bosch]], [[Techtronic Industries]] and [[WMH Tool Group]]. In April 2008 they told Congress that SawStop's braking system is:<ref name="HR4783object"/>
*dangerous because it requires the user to come in contact with the blade before activating;
*dangerous because it requires the user to come in contact with the blade before activating;
*unproven, particularly in terms of durability;
*unproven, particularly in terms of durability;
*prone to false trips caused by commonly available wet and green wood;
*prone to false trips caused by commonly available wet and green wood;
Line 43: Line 56:
*costly to the user because once activated, saw blade and cartridge must be replaced; and
*costly to the user because once activated, saw blade and cartridge must be replaced; and
*significantly more expensive, ranging from a minimum of 25 percent and ranging upwards depending on saw type
*significantly more expensive, ranging from a minimum of 25 percent and ranging upwards depending on saw type
The PTI also objects to the licensing necessary due to the "more than 50 patents" related to SawStop's braking system.<ref name="HR4783object"/>
The PTI objects to the licensing necessary due to the "more than 50 patents" related to SawStop's braking system;<ref name="HR4783object"/> such costs "would destroy the market for the cheapest, most popular saws, adding $100 or more to the price of consumer models that typically sell for less than $200."<ref name="busweek2011"/> In response, their members developed "new plastic guards to shield table saw users from the dangers of a spinning blade" and began selling models with that feature in 2007; as of May 2011, PTI says "its member companies have received no reports of injuries on [the 750,000] table saws with the new guard design."<ref name="salon2011"/>

==Restrictions and limitations==
The company notes the following restrictions and limitations:<ref name="ssfaq"/>
*Activating the braking system often damages one to two teeth on the blade.<ref name="ssfaq"/>
*The braking system must be deactivated when cutting very green or wet timber.
*Non-conductive blades or blades with non-conductive hubs or teeth cannot be used.
*The braking system is designed to work with [[wikt:kerf|kerfs]] from 3/32″ to 3/16″; using thinner or thicker kerfs limits the saw's ability to stop the blade after accidental contact, likely resulting in more serious injury.

The company also note that the braking feature is impractical to retrofit into existing table saws.<ref name="ssfaq"/>


==References== <!-- as of June 2011, most of these refs has details not yet in the article -->
==References== <!-- as of June 2011, most of these refs has details not yet in the article -->
{{reflist|refs=
{{reflist|2|refs=
<ref name="cpsc2001">{{cite web| url= http://www.cpsc.gov/CPSCPUB/PREREL/prhtml01/01202.html |title= CPSC Chairman Awards Safety Commendation to SawStop, LLC | date= July 20, 2001 | publisher= [[Consumer Product Safety Commission]]| location= Washington, DC | accessdate= 2011-06-19}}</ref>
<ref name="cpsc2001">{{cite web| url= http://www.cpsc.gov/CPSCPUB/PREREL/prhtml01/01202.html |title= CPSC Chairman Awards Safety Commendation to SawStop, LLC | date= July 20, 2001 | publisher= [[Consumer Product Safety Commission]]| location= Washington, DC | accessdate= 2011-06-19}}</ref>
<ref name="ssfaq">{{cite web| url= http://www.sawstop.com/how-it-works/faq/ | title=FAQ | publisher=SawStop | accessdate= 2011-06-19}}</ref>
<ref name="ssfaq">{{cite web| url= http://www.sawstop.com/how-it-works/faq/ | title=FAQ | publisher=SawStop | accessdate= 2011-06-19}}</ref>
Line 63: Line 67:
<ref name="dreview2006">{{cite web| url= http://www.designnews.com/article/5897-Man_on_a_Mission.php | title= Man on a Mission | author=Charles J. Murray| publisher= [[Design News]] | date=September 3, 2006 |
<ref name="dreview2006">{{cite web| url= http://www.designnews.com/article/5897-Man_on_a_Mission.php | title= Man on a Mission | author=Charles J. Murray| publisher= [[Design News]] | date=September 3, 2006 |
accessdate= 2011-06-19}}</ref>
accessdate= 2011-06-19}}</ref>
<ref name="busweek2011">{{cite web| title= Consumer Safety: A Fight Over Table Saws | url= http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/11_25/b4233032712156.htm | date= June 9, 2011 | publisher= [[Bloomberg Businessweek]] | author= Jeff Plungis| accessdate=2011-06-29}}</ref>
<ref name="salon2011">{{cite web| title= New rules for table saws sought to cut amputations | url= http://www.salon.com/wires/politics/05/25/D9NENBD81_us_table_saw_dangers/ | work= [[Associated Press]] | author= Jennifer C. Kerr| date= May 25, 2011 | publisher= [[Salon.com]] | accessdate=2011-06-29}}</ref>
<ref name="engrUK2001">{{cite web| title= SawStop makes for safer woodworking | url= http://www.theengineer.co.uk/channels/process-engineering/sawstop-makes-for-safer-woodworking/282335.article | author= Jason Ford | date= 10 July 2001 | publisher= [[The Engineer (magazine)|The Engineer]] | accessdate=2011-06-29}}</ref>
<ref name="inc2005">{{cite web| title= He Took On the Whole Power-Tool Industry | author= Melba Newsome | url= http://www.inc.com/magazine/20050701/disruptor-gass_Printer_Friendly.html | date= July 2005 | publisher= [[Inc. (magazine)|Inc.]] | accessdate=2011-06-29}}</ref>
<ref name="CPSCpet2003">{{cite web| title= Requesting the Consumer Product Safety Commission To Initiate Rulemaking for Table Saws | url= http://www.cpsc.gov/library/foia/foia03/petition/Bladesawpt1.pdf | format=[[PDF]] |date=April 15, 2003| work= Petition | publisher= Consumer Product Safety Commission | accessdate= 2011-06-29}}</ref>
}}
}}



Revision as of 20:27, 29 June 2011

SawStop
IndustryManufacturing
Founded2005 (2005)
Headquarters,
USA
Key people
Steve Gass, David Fanning, and David Fulmer (cofounders)
ProductsTable saws
Websitewww.sawstop.com

SawStop is a table saw manufacturer headquartered in Tualatin, Oregon, USA. The company was founded in 2005 to sell table saws that feature a patented automatic braking system that stops the saw within milliseconds if its blade comes in contact with the operator's hand or other body part.

How it works

Stopping the blade...would require a two-part process. First, [Gass] needed a brake that would work quickly enough when it came into contact with a woodworker's hand. Next, he had to design a triggering system that could differentiate between finger and wood. Given the speed of the blade, it would have to stop in about 1/100 of a second — or at about an eighth of an inch of rotation after making contact. Any further, and the cut would be so deep that the device would be useless. To stop the blade this quickly would require about 1,000 pounds of force to decelerate the blade in 10 milliseconds.

— Inc.magazine in 2005.[1]

SawStop's saws applies a small amount of electric current to the blade of the saw. This current is continuously monitored. If the saw detects a change in this current (as would occur if a hand or other body part came into contact with the blade) an automatic braking system is activated, forcing an aluminum brake block into the blade. The saw stops within five milliseconds, and angular momentum lowers the blade into the table. The operator suffers a small nick instead of an amputation or other more serious injury.[2] The design takes advantage of the difference in "electrical capacitance and conductivity" between wood and flesh.[3]

According to SawStop, there are restrictions and limitations:[4]

  • The braking system must be deactivated when cutting very green or wet timber.
  • Non-conductive blades or blades with non-conductive hubs or teeth cannot be used.
  • The braking system is designed to work with kerfs from 3/32″ to 3/16″; using thinner or thicker kerfs limits the saw's ability to stop the blade after accidental contact, likely resulting in more serious injury.
  • It is impractical to retrofit into existing table saws.[4]

Activating the braking system often damages one to two teeth on the blade.[4]

History

Steve Gass, an amateur woodworker with a doctorate in physics who worked as a patent attorney,[1] came up with the idea for SawStop's braking system in 1999.[5] It took Gass two weeks to do the design, and a third week to build a prototype based on a "$200 secondhand table saw."[1] After numerous tests using a hot dog as a finger substitute, in spring 2000, Gass conducted the first test with a real finger on himself: he applied Novocain to his left ring finger, and after two false starts, he place his finger into the teeth of a whirring saw blade. The blade stopped as designed, and although it "hurt like the dickens and bled a lot," his finger remained intact.[1]

SawStop, at the time consisting of "three guys out of a barn in Wilsonville", demonstrated a prototype in August 2000,[1] at the International Woodworking Machinery and Furniture Supply Fair, a trade show.[5] A series of meetings followed, where in an attempt to license his invention, Gass "negotiated with major players such as Ryobi, Delta, Black & Decker, Emerson, and Craftsman"; he followed up on those negotiations with a February 2001 presentation to the Defense Research Industry (a trade group for attorneys representing the power-tool industry).[1] That presentation immediately preceded one by one from Dan Lanier, Black & Decker's national coordinating counsel, a presentation that gave Gass the impression he was unlikely to succeed in convincing major power tool manufacturers to license SawStop technology.[1]

In July 2001, SawStop was awarded a safety commendation by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) for "developing innovative safety technology for power saws intended to prevent finger amputations and other serious injuries."[2] In 2002 Popular Science named SawStop's technology one of its "100 Best New Innovations."[6]

In January 2002, SawStop appeared to come close to a licensing agreement with Ryobi, who agreed to terms that involved no up-front fee and a 3% royalty based on the wholesale price of all saws sold with SawStop's technology; the royalty would grow to 8% if most of the industry also licensed the technology.[1] According to Gass, when a typographical error in the contract had not been resolved after six months of effort by Gass to get Ryobi to sign the proposed deal, Gass gave up on the effort in mid-2002.[1] Some subsequent licensing negotiations were deadlocked when the manufacturers insisted that Gass should "indemnify them against any lawsuit if SawStop malfunctioned", something Gass wouldn't agree to since he would not be manufacturing the saws."[1]

The failure to license it to Ryobi or other prompted SawStop to start their own company; over two years later, the company's first saw was produced by a Taiwanese manufacturing plant in November 2004; by 2005 SawStop had grown to "eight people out of a two-story barn Gass built himself."[1]

Citing statistics that show accidents with table and bench saws resulted in 3000 amputations of one or more fingers, SawStop's technology inspired Representative Kevin Joyce to propose the Illinois General Assembly's 2005 Electrical Saw Safety Act[7] The number of finger or hand amputations has more recently been estimated to be 4000,[8] costing more than $2 billion a year to treat victims.[1][9]

In June 2006, the CPSC recommended that the U.S. government begin the rulemaking process that could result in mandatory safety standards for table saws.

SawStop has provoked opposition from the Power Tool Institute (PTI),[8] which represents Black & Decker, Hilti, Hitachi Koki, Makita, Metabo, Bosch, Techtronic Industries and WMH Tool Group. In April 2008 they told Congress that SawStop's braking system is:[10]

  • dangerous because it requires the user to come in contact with the blade before activating;
  • unproven, particularly in terms of durability;
  • prone to false trips caused by commonly available wet and green wood;
  • potentially vulnerable to latent damage that cannot be inspected and may cause a hazard;
  • costly to the user because once activated, saw blade and cartridge must be replaced; and
  • significantly more expensive, ranging from a minimum of 25 percent and ranging upwards depending on saw type

The PTI objects to the licensing necessary due to the "more than 50 patents" related to SawStop's braking system;[10] such costs "would destroy the market for the cheapest, most popular saws, adding $100 or more to the price of consumer models that typically sell for less than $200."[8] In response, their members developed "new plastic guards to shield table saw users from the dangers of a spinning blade" and began selling models with that feature in 2007; as of May 2011, PTI says "its member companies have received no reports of injuries on [the 750,000] table saws with the new guard design."[9]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Melba Newsome (July 2005). "He Took On the Whole Power-Tool Industry". Inc. Retrieved 2011-06-29.
  2. ^ a b "CPSC Chairman Awards Safety Commendation to SawStop, LLC". Washington, DC: Consumer Product Safety Commission. July 20, 2001. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  3. ^ Jason Ford (10 July 2001). "SawStop makes for safer woodworking". The Engineer. Retrieved 2011-06-29.
  4. ^ a b c "FAQ". SawStop. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  5. ^ a b Charles J. Murray (September 3, 2006). "Man on a Mission". Design News. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  6. ^ "Requesting the Consumer Product Safety Commission To Initiate Rulemaking for Table Saws" (PDF). Petition. Consumer Product Safety Commission. April 15, 2003. Retrieved 2011-06-29.
  7. ^ "HB0450". Illinois General Assembly. 2005. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  8. ^ a b c Jeff Plungis (June 9, 2011). "Consumer Safety: A Fight Over Table Saws". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 2011-06-29.
  9. ^ a b Jennifer C. Kerr (May 25, 2011). "New rules for table saws sought to cut amputations". Associated Press. Salon.com. Retrieved 2011-06-29.
  10. ^ a b Susan M. Young (April 10, 2008). "The Power Tool Institute's Comments Opposing H.R. 4783" (PDF). House Committee on Ways and Means. Retrieved 2011-06-19.