IIRC the table saw is the number one most dangerous tool in the woodshop. More people are severely injured at the table saw then any other power tool. Since the invention of "Saw Stop" there is a "better/saver way" to point to so lawyers have something to argue about. If you own the saw you have yourself to blame, however, if its the bosses saw then you can blame him for not having the "safest" saw available.
When I taught the kids how to use the table saw I stressed over and over that it was the most dangerous tool in the shop. I have a friend, old time carpenter, that is missing several portions of his fingers and thumb to table saws, he has offered living proof of the consequences of ignoring "safety first".
well said. think the old style radial arm saw is a close 2nd for danger too. of all the safety devices/blade guards i've seen on table saws (& there are plenty) have yet to see one that is really effective. in fact, some are more dangerous than none. i taught jr high shop for 21 years, fortunately no serious accidents, somehow all my own digits are intact too. my experience is that when students go through the safety on each machine (& supervised!) they are actually more cautious & safer than most adults who either know it all or are careless. continue in your safety 1st approach & i'll try to do the same. on or off the tractor & machinery :thumbsup: