Laser sight question.

   / Laser sight question. #1  

Shield Arc

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Probably about to make a fool of myself. I Googled it but came up with nothing. My 14-year old grandson came by yesterday to show me a project he did in Jr. high wood shop. He was saying during shop orientation the shop teacher was talking about a safety class he went to where they had laser sights on the saws, if you placed your hand under the laser sight the saw would not turn on!:cool:
Anybody ever hear of this? Or is my grandson pulling papa's leg?:laughing:
 
   / Laser sight question. #2  
at first thought, maybe a safety feature for equipment in school shops ???
on second thought, how can the sensor distinguish between a hand and a piece of lumber ?

Pete
 
   / Laser sight question. #4  
Don't know how it works, but it does say it gives a warning.

The laser saw guide provides an instant warning should the operators hand or fingers be in danger.

Laser Us Inc - Laser Saw Guides

Some laser saws activate when the saw is running as it is mounted on the arbor.

Other laser pointers use a switch to turn the laser on /off.

I believe the safety part is that if you see the laser is on your hand, you,using common sense will not pull /let down the saw.

Here is a capacitive type safety saw.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=esnQwVZOrUU

http://www.sawstop.com/how-it-works/
 
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   / Laser sight question. #5  
I imagine you still need to have your eyes open to see the red line across your fingers...

Pete
 
   / Laser sight question. #6  
Interesting...how does it work:confused:

Motion detection....nope, it's mounted on the saw blade itself and saw dust moves

Heat detection....nope, blade heats up in operation, wouldn't it stop??

And, all at an affordable price!
 
   / Laser sight question.
  • Thread Starter
#7  
JJ he did say something about testing the laser with a hot dog.
 
   / Laser sight question. #8  
In finger safe tablesaws, Sawstop is the dominant technology. He uses a combination of capacitance sensors and a brake cartridge to drop the saw. He (Gass the company founder) the guy that did the hotdog tests.

There are some competing technologies, a new one, and possibly the one your grandson is talking about is called Whirlwind. Whirlwind Tool Patents Pending Saw Safety Technology. His system is based conductive plastic on the guard, sort of like a touch lamp, so he can get around Gass's patents. Problem is, the guard needs to be installed for the system to work. That is a major inconvienance for some types of cuts. There are a ring of LED's around the blade guard, perhaps that's what your gandson saw? AFAIK, Whirlwind is only a prototype.

The bigger problem is, Gass has SO MANY (unjust IMHO) patents on finger safe saws that its virtually impossible for a competitor to get his foot in the door. He's a patent lawyer by trade and has anything remotely related to his system locked up tight. Matter of fact, he was lobbying California to MANDATE his safe saws and have traditional saws declared "illegal" and unsafe. In the woodworking world, there is not a whole lot of love for Gass.

Whirlwind:

 
   / Laser sight question. #10  
The reflectance and scatter off of skin is very different compared to a piece of word.
 
 
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