The Most Exciting Table Saw in YEARS!
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
This might be the best table saw I've ever seen! The safety system is proactive versus the reactive type system seen on SawStop table saws. It uses cameras to detect your hand. Right now this is an industrial type table saw meant for production wood shops but I would love to see this technology work its way down into consumer level saws. What do you think about this saw?
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Tools shown in this video:
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▼EXPAND FOR TOOL LINKS and INFO▼ Watch Next: The Hater's Guide to SawStop kzread.info/dash/bejne/epOElsttl8iYaKg.html Tools In This Video: If you are interested in buying one of these, I have Brad Snyder's (the guy in the video) contact info. Text me the word BRAD to 1 (731) 207-7151 and I'll get you his info. Altendorf Sliding Table Saws www.altendorfgroup.com/en-us/sliding-table-saws/ Altendorf Hand Guard Technology www.altendorfgroup.com/en-us/machines/altendorf-hand-guard/ 📲 Never miss another tool deal. Sign up for my Tool Deals SMS Alerts - NOTE: I text out tool deals so you don’t miss any! text DEALS to 1 (731) 207-7151 Be sure to add DEALS to your text to me so you get added to the proper list. You can also click this link my.community.com/731woodworks Important to add the word DEALS to the text! (If you use one of these Amazon and other affiliate links, I may receive a commission) Some other useful links: Daily Tool Deals on my website: www.731woodworks.com/tool-deals Subscribe to our email Newsletter: mailchi.mp/7e44c16eefdc/731-woodworks-email-newsletter Check out our easy-to-follow woodworking plans: www.731woodworks.com/store Outlaw's Board Butter - So Good it Should be Outlawed: www.731woodworks.com/store/boardbutter
@KenFullman
11 ай бұрын
They should have tested it with a hotdog sausage. Sometimes you might want to crosscut one of those and the sawstop tables won't let you.
Thank you both for taking the time to come by and visit us at the booth last week. It was a real pleasure to meet you and your wife. Tell her I'm sorry if I scared her a bit with the demo!! Don't forget, we do market to the industrial sector but if you want one for the garage shop... John A. will happily install one wherever you want!
@NSResponder
11 ай бұрын
You have a flair for showmanship! Kudos for an entertaining and informative presentation.
@wernichtscharneck5368
11 ай бұрын
Super exciting
@davidswanson5669
11 ай бұрын
You’ve got that Jeff Bridges + Texas charm. Great product too!
@mauroylospichiruchis544
11 ай бұрын
that saw is just beautiful
@norzoloco1
11 ай бұрын
What an awesome machine
Anything that can keep woodworkers safe is a win in my book. But it’s probably going to be out of the reach of most of us. Anyway, 10/10.
@garyblack8717
11 ай бұрын
I'm guessing it costs more than a lot of us paid for our homes! Pretty cool though!
@Slowhand871
11 ай бұрын
True but it will be common at a much cheaper rate in time. Tech actually does trickle down
@binghoward70
11 ай бұрын
After I hit the Lotto, it will be in my garage… 😅
@Pepe-dq2ib
11 ай бұрын
@@Slowhand871 yeah, the sawstop came out in 1999 and 23yrs later, trickled down into something even more expensive.
@wingedcoyote
11 ай бұрын
@@Pepe-dq2ib On the bigger ones you don't pay much more than comparable saws from PM etc. I do wish they could get the jobsite ones cheaper for tradesmen.
As a computer scientist who also does woodworking, it is awesome to see this type of technology crossover. Thanks for sharing!
@michaelkvalvik7358
11 ай бұрын
As a tablesaw, I don't like cutting off fingers.
@otallono
11 ай бұрын
@@michaelkvalvik7358 Yea, right
@tehbieber
11 ай бұрын
As a computer scientist I don't know how I'd feel about trusting my fingers to computer vision 😬
@garagehobbies
11 ай бұрын
@@tehbieber Same. First thing I thought of was "hell no" and I work in the software industry.
@nattyg078
11 ай бұрын
@@garagehobbies I mean, whatcha think makes sawstop work?
"I bet you're wondering how much this costs." Yep. "Well it's expensive." Thanks for clearing that up...
How would this react to a board catching the blade wrong, kicking out, and pulling your hand in as it kicks the board? Wonder how fast the computer can see that coming, because that sort of accident happens in a split second.
@chrisivandadorf
11 ай бұрын
judging by how every other comment besides the kickback questions get some harts / like symbols i guess this is something we dont talk about :-)
@Maxime-ho9iv
11 ай бұрын
There is no way a computer will do this computation in the time it is required to save your hand.
@StroalOutdoors
11 ай бұрын
@@Maxime-ho9iv The average computer can do 5-500 billion computations a second. On the low end, that's a calculation ever 12 nano seconds. If a kickback takes half a second , that's 500,000 nano seconds. In that time, the computer can perform 41,666 computations.
@liquido11
11 ай бұрын
@@StroalOutdoors But it is probably not only CPU causing the delay (camera speed, transfer speed, etc.).
@StroalOutdoors
11 ай бұрын
@@liquido11 They do add delay, but it's still very possible.
Professional shops as well as small shops must also factor in incident costs. Just one minor accident on a table saw could cost several thousand dollars to over a $100,000 if nerve damage occurs, just in medical bills. Now factor in fines levied by OSHA if/when they find an issue. And then come the Lawyers and then your insurance rates go up and can even affect your ability to bid on projects. This looks like a very well built machine that will help increase production, boost employee confidence while using the saw and help you produce a better product. If I had the production volume and room in a production shop, I would seriously consider this saw. I would assume financing would be available, either through the manufacturer or as a low interest business loan.
My daughter and I were at AWFS last summer. She was one of the students in the fresh wood competition. We met Brad and talked to him for a few minutes as he demonstrated the product. It was awesome and it was great meeting him.
@BandSWoodcraft
4 ай бұрын
Hey there! I had a blast meeting you two there! That piece she created was more than impressive and I hope she keeps pushing the envelope of her skills to see what else she comes up with!!
Awesome saw, and always a pleasure to listen to a guy who knows what he's talking about and genuinely believes in the product he's selling.
Yes Matt. The hand saving technology should be in every saw NOW!
That is awesome! That tech is what is needed at the small shop level. Surely, there has to be a way to save the fingers!!
Is it probably super expensive? Yes. I do think this is one of the best and most thought-out saws I've seen. Hopefully, they can make hobbyist ones priced competitively with sawstop sooner than later.
@anteroreilander6823
11 ай бұрын
The rumor that I heard was that a regular saw kept stopping even though hands weren’t even close and when a black dude tried to put his hand close to the blade, it wouldn’t stop. You need to buy an AI option to make it work better and pay super expensive monthly fees for the AI. Like I said I didn’t hear this first hand.
@petemclinc
11 ай бұрын
The downside of the the SawStop is you have to replace an expensive cartridge and scrap your expensive blade or dado set. I bet this Altendorf saw is at least twice as expensive but I like the technology. However, you don't need any of this expensive technology, simply use common sense and safe practices, keep your hands well away from the blade.
@montet202
11 ай бұрын
Starts at over $30k.
@AlAmantea
11 ай бұрын
@@petemclinc uh.... No... that saw is over $66,000 US dollars... I could buy 20 Sawstops for one of those.
@lakeratatouille
11 ай бұрын
@@petemclinc You sound like the administration in the white house telling me to buy a tesla because they are inexpensive and they don't understand why you don't have one yet.
I worked on 2 Altendorf table saws every day for years and neither of them ever broke down. fantastic saws. This new tech looks great, albeit untouchable for a small shop due to price.
Jaw drops! That is one magnificent piece of work.
I used to run an Altendorf that size when I worked for a large cabinet manufacturer. I miss that saw.
I used one of their saws when i worked at a cabinet shop. After that i swore that when/if I ever have the funds, these are the saw i want in my shop.
Love this, but man I know that a) I don't need a production saw like that, and b) I'm not cashing out my 401k to buy one lol. That safety system though - that's the smartest design I've seen.
@BandSWoodcraft
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the love man, it is an awesome system!!
I work in a small wood shop that has an older Altendorf with a 10 foot sliding bed. I can definitely attest to the quality. I’ve always said if I had a small shop of my own, and could only have one tool, it would be a sliding tablesaw, The precise cut beats anything I’ve seen.
Amazing!!! Can’t believe I missed that at the show. Nice work buddy.
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
see you in Atlanta then! 😊
@731Woodworks
11 ай бұрын
Thanks! Sorry we didn't get to catch up more!
Wow!!! Please get this into the consumer market asap!! Absolutely fantastic safety
@Ryan-re1rs
11 ай бұрын
Yeah, only cost like an arm and a leg..
@felixb.59
11 ай бұрын
I wish Festtool (who bought Sawstop) didn't sue bosch for trying to implement similar safety features into their saws. I really like boschs concept, just like sawstop they simply measure the conductivity of the material, to check if it's wood or your finger. but unlike sawstop they don't stop and destroy the blade by ramming a aluminum block into it with explosives, but instead use the explosives to shoot the blade downwards and therefore you just have to change the explosives and not the blade and aluminum block as well. it was a relatively cheap and very safe system. I'm just waiting for the sawstop patent to run out
@steveman1982
11 ай бұрын
@@Ryan-re1rs but keeping your fingers: priceless ;)
id be more interested to see what it can do in a kick back situation where the saw driives your hand through the blade from the back before you even know what happened. im curious why they never did a test like that, and am curious if its fast enough for that.
@YaH_Gives_Wisdom
11 ай бұрын
That’s the most likely scenario for an accident, not sliding your hand in the path while pushing. Which they didn’t even address.
@ErebosXVII
10 ай бұрын
we have one of those at school and they in the blink of an eye, even from behind. the detections radios is pretty big aswell.
@surnamehrubes5632
2 ай бұрын
Saw stop
i watched the Altendorf demostration of this at Ligna (woodworking fair in Hannover/Germany) this year. Really impressive. The cameras even detected a childs hand
Interesting to see this type of tech advancing! I look forward to seeing what else you saw at the show!
That's actually a really really good idea.
Amazing table saw
Matt, very interesting mating high tech with high precision saw. Now waiting for what else you found at the show. Thanks for being our team on the go, looking for new/updated methods and tools.
@731Woodworks
11 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
Insane! What an incredible system!
Wow!! Thank y’all for doing that. I did not know this world exists.
I'd honestly like to see both on a saw one day both the computer-based laser and the typical saw stop
saw this at IWF last year in Atlanta and spoke with the reps. Great technology, especially the reset (no replacement of breakblock or blade). Not sure if it will ever be cheap enough for the DIYer (that drop drive system is very expensive). Great to see you sharing it with everyone!!
@barryomahony4983
10 ай бұрын
Yea, didn't he say the carriage that is dropped down at high speed was 200+ kilograms (400+ lbs.). That's gonna need serious, high torque motor mechanisms. I assume this machine runs on 3 phase power.
What a machine!! Cuts like butter too 🔥🔥
Love this type of thinking. Great Product
That's brilliant! Altendorf table saws are already awesome, and this tech makes them even better! Would love to see the camera/AI system added to smaller units.
Hoping at some point that these safety features will make it into cheaper saws. Especially here in Europe we only have the Festool saws with Sawstop tech but they are simply too small - we need a proper European saw 🤞🏻
Pretty awesome tech. Thank you for sharing
that thing would take up my whole shop. but it is very nice. he is one heck of a sales man.
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
From your keyboard to my Directors ears! Thank you for the compliment! 😂😂
We've got a similar altendoorf in our shop and its amazing. Wish I could have one at home.
As a mechanical engineer who frequently works with cameras and hobbyist woodworker, this thing is awesome. Thanks Matt for sharing this.
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
Are you ready to take that hobby to the next level?😊😊
@731Woodworks
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
Wow, what a cool machine.
Beautiful system. Top of my wish list.
Definitely cool tech. I wonder how reliable the hand detection is, as it's software based, rather than the much more simple capacitive contact detection that SawStop uses. I imagine (I hope) they have tested the heck out of it, as a failure would most likely lead to liability lawsuits. Anyway, it's great to see this kind of safety tech integrated into the saw, and I hope it will make it into consumer-level saws soon.
@mrjakobt
11 ай бұрын
Altendorf wouldn’t bring this to market, if they weren’t absolutely sure it’s safe. They’ve got a lot to loose.
This saw brand is worth its weight in gold. I was using one that’s nearly 20 years old today and it’s still bullet proof and accurate. That new technology is amazing. Nice video mate
@roo1314
11 ай бұрын
I'm not dissing this saw or video at all but it probably takes it's weight in gold to buy it! My 30-year old Jet still works fine so guess I'll stick with it. If I ever upgrade it will probably be a Sawstop 😃
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for all the love! It is a double edged sword selling such a high quality product. I can 100% stand behind our machines but once I sell it to a shop... unless they grow in not going to be selling them another saw!
@montet202
11 ай бұрын
If you’re using a saw professionally, this saw pats for itself rather quickly. I can mill and process hardwoods and sheet goods far faster with much higher quality cuts and with far more accuracy. American cabinet saws can’t hold a candle to a good slider. And Altendorf saws are top notch.
@jason-hh6lu
11 ай бұрын
Let me rephrase it. This saw is worth it weight in gold if you have a busy shop and are either processing timber from rough sawn to finish quality timber or are breaking down sheets of MDF and ply every day. It will pay for itself by way of less hours/ Labour to make a finished product ie. Furniture or door linings and solid timber doors for instance. 😊👍🏻
all the time I'm watching this video the song "If I were a rich man" was running through my mind. what a splendid piece of machinery.
Man o man are sliding table saws my dream. Happy you got to take a look at some!
For $1 million dollars :p. Hammer has some blade stopping tech too. It's good to see vendors trying new detection systems out, even if the saw is out of my price range. Thanks for including it.
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
Hammer (Felder) uses the CS system and does not control the motor assembly when it activates. They use magnets that disengage and allows the motor to just drop down. Our motor assembly is driven by servo motors and is controlled the entire way, not allowing the motor to bottom out or be damaged in any way. That is how we are able to be back up and cutting 10 seconds after the safety system activates.
Impressive technology. Definitely seems like this sensor approach is something that could eventually be scaled down to a hobbyist level similar to SawStop.
@jameszaccardo1520
11 ай бұрын
well hopefully having more than one safety options means sawstop can stop charging $5k for a "hobbyist" saw. thank god for some competition.
@nino9273
11 ай бұрын
@@jameszaccardo1520 as of right now this technology took about 10 years to develop and it's essentially an option that costs around €10k. It will probably take years until it can compete with sawstop for hobbyists.
@jameszaccardo1520
11 ай бұрын
@@nino9273so what? better than never.
@dubi127
11 ай бұрын
in principle its pretty simple concept, you can run basic machine vision with just a raspberry pi, triggering the safety system is just sending a signal to a relay, modifying off the shelf table saw to mechanically retract is probably the most complicated thing to solve, or maybe just replacing the blade height adjustment crank with a clearpath servo or just a nema 34 stepper, cranking that handle at around 1500rpm would most likely get the blade out of the way pretty quick and the whole system should be around 300-400usd in parts... (600-700 in case of clearpath servo)
@blahhblaah74
11 ай бұрын
@@dubi127 Conceptually it is indeed simple. That doesn't mean making it well is also easy. You have to have a vision system that works quick and well in all kinds of situations (dust, debris, ...) and you need to make sure that you have an extremely low level of false positives and absolutely no false negative. In other words: making a quick proof of concept is indeed not that hard, but making it into a product that works flawless is a lot less easy.
What a lovely guy, I really enjoyed this.
i’m in my first semester of furniture making school. last week, i had some insane kickback, and i also tripped the saw stop with the miter gauge fence
I'm glad to be living in a time, place, and economy where technology like this is able to be developed. Yes it is expensive. Yes it takes a long time for the price to come down to a level where the hobbyist can afford it. However, here it is possible. I'm thankful to be here in America. Stay awesome.
@AncoraImparoPiper
11 ай бұрын
China will copy it and sell it for $4.99 on Temu. 🤪
@XRRS24
11 ай бұрын
Too bad it's a German brand....
@AuntJemimaGames
11 ай бұрын
@@XRRS24 Germany makes good products, but that doesn't mean they'll be affordable to the average consumer. These will likely bottom out at thousands of dollars, which is still outside the range of what most hobbyists would consider "affordable."
@XRRS24
11 ай бұрын
@@AuntJemimaGames sorry, I wasn't clear 😉 I replied because the other person was thankful to be in America, which I found art as the saw originates in Germany. Hence my remark 😉 Germany makes great tools and I wish I had an Altendorf in my garage! Cheers from the Netherlands 😉
@Tropicoboy
11 ай бұрын
I own a sawstop and yah its not the most powerful versatile tablesaw and yes its expensive but my fingers cost more than the extra cost of the saw. I like tbis tech. If i ever get a bigger shop i might consider this saw
We bought a Altendorf saw around 2004,around 2015 was the first time a repair had to be done. This saw was used at least 4 hours a day,every day. Glad to see the new Hand Saver! They make a Really Great Saw! Thanks for the video.
@731Woodworks
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing
wow that's beautiful
That is a beautiful system
I’ve used alfendorf saws in workshop environments most of my career. they are the best table saws on the market. The rolls Royce of saws for sure. once you use a sliding panel saw everything else feels like going back in time.
@731Woodworks
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
Thank you for the love! I can't agree more and not from an employee standpoint. I was looking at the Altendorf F25 for my own company prior to working for them and looked/researched and got hands on with others but the Altendorf design, materials and manufacturing results in the hands down best product available. Plus it will last long enough for me to pass it down to my kids.
@richiejames928
11 ай бұрын
@@BradSnyderAltendorf yeah they are incredible. Accuracy like nothing else and paired with a two or three bag extractor they are so clean. essential in a shop that’s cutting MDF for hours on end every day. Also, a small detail but changing the blade on a f45 takes me about 20 seconds. it’s just such a well designed saw.
The definition of adapt and overcome. Sawstop not wanting to release a patent so other companies use this technology to save peoples hands. This company developed a new way to stop injuries. Awesome!! Thanks Mighty Matt!
@totallynottrademarked5279
11 ай бұрын
A patent they never should have been awarded since the technologies were already in touch to turn on lamps and well brakes are on every car. Or at least a 2-5 year utility patent only for combining them. Not this 20 year garbage they were awarded.
@delxinogaming6046
11 ай бұрын
They tried to license it first. Only after everyone rejected them did they decide to make a saw…
@yolo_burrito
11 ай бұрын
They are 2 different use cases.
@totallynottrademarked5279
11 ай бұрын
@@delxinogaming6046 If you read the patent case as was the understanding of most manufacturers that they should not have been awarded the patent in the first place. Since it was using two existing technologies. Which would have disqualified them for anything more than a 5 year utility patent. They later went on to get awarded a 20-year patent which was done under very dubious circumstances. The company was not started by people that wanted to make a difference it was made by people that were long time patent attorneys and abused their connections in the approval process to get awarded a patent they never should have been. This is why Europe does not recognize it and allows people like Bosch to have a competitive product. Since their's do not use a brake and capacitive technology was already existing in touch lamps from 1954 and those patents had long expired.
@KaladinDarkEyes
11 ай бұрын
Don't forget sawstop also tried to get legislation passed that would have required their system on all industrial table saws which would have essentially gave them a monopoly.
What a piece of art!
that is super exciting to see this!!
I'd be interested to see the fmea on the machine vision system. I'd still much prefer having the saw stop system as well. I can think of a lot of plausible edge cases and combinations of conditions that could cause the machine vision system to fail. So while it is a fantastic improvement and can greatly reduce down time, I'd still much rather it augment a capacitive system like the saw stop. It doesn't replace it.
Yeah, $67K is JUST out of my price range. 😂 Can't wait to see that tech in a more affordable saw!
@julianreverse
11 ай бұрын
How much is your hand?
@treggmichelleliebler399
11 ай бұрын
@@julianreverse Around $4K...according to Sawstop.
@joseph7105
10 ай бұрын
Worth every penny IMO. Our shop is installing $50k worth of kitchens every 2 weeks
This guy is a true salesman. Nice job! I couldn't fit this in my garage or I'd buy one.
@BradSnyderAltendorf
10 ай бұрын
Y'all out here making me blush!😊😊😊
Wow, this is amazing!
As a software engineer, I wouldn’t trust any proactive software safety mechanism without a physical reactive backup like a sawstop. Software engineers are notoriously bad at writing software
@ianbrown4242
11 ай бұрын
100%
@rohlfing63
10 ай бұрын
Software engineers aren't "notoriously bad" at writing software (yeah, I'm sure some are), but they're not great at envisioning every potential use case. As soon as you think you have an idiot proof product, the world provides bigger idiots to prove you wrong. As a non-software guy managing a bunch of software engineers doing control systems for heavy equipment, I can assure you that it's hard to simultaneously account for all of the stupid things humans will try to do without getting in the way of what a good operator is trying to accomplish.
@ianbrown4242
10 ай бұрын
@@rohlfing63 You're exactly right...but I'd still agree that the general quality of coding (especially when interfacing real-world scenarios) is middling at best.
What about if there is some sort of a kickback that pulls your hand side ways? Also the biggest challenges with this tech is fast retraction. Vision system would not be that difficult or expensive. Since it is not destructive, you could easily over do it for safety.
@sciencesold_
11 ай бұрын
The cameras are positioned in a way that it can probably still see your hand until its well past the blade, plus I'm sure with something with that much tech in it, its got some sort of kickback sensor that can trigger the blade retraction, especially since its non-destructive.
I saw it a few months ago, it looks great
Beautiful engineering.
This is a fascinating leap in tech. I'm sure my SawStop was once looked at in a similar light a long time ago. My late uncle wished that I'd save up for a SawStop. I guess, when I'm in my mid-80s, I'll be telling people that THIS is a must have for the same reasons he told me. Thanks for sharing this with us... I doubt I would have seen it any time soon otherwise!!
@spilleradam
4 ай бұрын
If you can ever afford it.
This looks like an amazing piece of kit. Although i have heard reports for it struggling in poor lightning conditions and with shadow's, causing faulse activations. I would like to see this kind of safty feature become available on a machine designed for the smaller workshop, i believe that both Altendorf and felder only offer them on the larger models.
@jodilea144
11 ай бұрын
I wondered about that, as even my vinyl cutting machine has issues with registering in low light conditions.
@joeporkka2047
11 ай бұрын
Not so surprising I suppose, but a shop should be really well lit anyways - so I wouldn't expect this to be a problem in real world conditions. If I can afford this saw, I can afford proper lighting for sure!
@derekrobertson1548
11 ай бұрын
@@joeporkka2047 you make a great point. I am just going on reviews that I have read where a few of them said that they had to disable this safty feature due to faulse tripping of the blade and Altendorf said it was due to poor lightning. No personal experience as they are well out of my price range and far to big for my shop. I would love to have one though and did look at them at one point.
@jodilea144
11 ай бұрын
@@joeporkka2047 I agree completely, but in my case, even standing to the side can cast a shadow and keep it from “seeing”. But yes, if I can afford a saw that costs that much, I can afford adequate lighting! 🙂
Thats incredible!
Thanks for showing this. Hopefully this will tricke down to smaller scale.
Beautiful! One need only sell both kidneys and your firstborn to afford it. Oh, and the guy with the single-bay garage workshop, guess what? LOL This thing is simply amazing! I DO have the room for it, but I wasn't born rich and can't spare a kidney, so I'll have to stick to my $800 saw and get the centerfold foldout of this to hang by my saw. Thanks for the video! As a retired radar engineer, I am forever enamored with cool technology!!
@BandSWoodcraft
11 ай бұрын
Give me a shout and let's talk about getting you one. Christmas isn't too far away right? 😊
I’m glad to see more safe table saws coming to the market.
We have been using the system for two years now together with the CNC stops. We have one of the first 10 machines in the workshop. Great system!
@erikkayV
11 ай бұрын
have you had any actual saves with it?
@julianreverse
11 ай бұрын
@@erikkayV It has already paid off twice.
@erikkayV
11 ай бұрын
@@julianreverse That is awesome.
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
THANK YOU!! It's great that you are on here and have first hand experience with the saw. I can talk it up all day but it speaks volumes when an actual customer endorses it!!😊😊😊
That's a damn nice saw setup
That's pretty awesome tech! I appreciate I'll most likely never own that saw or one like it, but maybe that technology can be put into a saw more affordable to someone on my level. It took me more than 10 years to save up for the SawStop cabinet saw. I don't think I have it in me to save up enough for this one!
Seems cool, I wonder how it performs in a kickback scenario or time where the hand is moving at a much high velocity. For now I’ll stay with my sawstop ✔️
@odbo_One
10 ай бұрын
That's a good question, I would like to know it's kickback function as well.
Purchased a $35k Robland saw last year but now I really want this... Take my money!!
As someone who will likely never use this type of machine. I still think this is absolutely fantastic.
Great saw!! I wonder if it reacts fast enough in the case of something like unexpected kickback that might force your hand to the blade?
@ryanpalmiter6863
11 ай бұрын
I use a slider table saw every day at work. You utilize hold down clamps for the work piece you are pushing thru. Your hands should never be as close as they are putting their hands. So, there is no risk of pulling hand into blade. This is wonderful technology! If a slider is being used the way it is intended, then there is very little danger
@Maxime-ho9iv
11 ай бұрын
@@ryanpalmiter6863The point of this technology is not to work only when you did everything right in the right conditions. Or a normal table saw will do the same.
@ryanpalmiter6863
11 ай бұрын
@Maxime-ho9iv I agree! I was referring to OP saying kickback pulling your hand in. I think this technology is wonderful and this/sawstop technology should be required for all table saws. The seat belt of table saws
when US Americans discover proper tools and machines 😂 Greetings from Germany!
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
Guten tag aus Amerika!
Hebrock saw. Saw Stop is a terrific invention, and they did try to offer it to other saw makers. too bad it didnt work. However it is great to see a new alternate technology come on board that is there to protect our fingers and hands from the blade. I know it is industrial only now but I believe time will evolve it down to the home woodworker. great stuff.
We have a couple of altendorfs at work but they're older models. Great saws
Definitely need this system in lower end / hobbyist / smaller scale type of systems. It's time! We need more alternatives to saw stop.
@ejd53
11 ай бұрын
Too expensive to do that at the present time.
@MemelordSupreme
11 ай бұрын
@@ejd53 Oh certainly but there are other companies that can build alternatives so hopefully this starts to become a thing There needs to be more competition and innovation. Saw stop can't be the ONLY dog in the park forever.
@ejd53
11 ай бұрын
@@MemelordSupreme Well luckily, the patents started expiring in 2020, and things should be completely up by 2024 according to some research I did. Here's hoping.
Great technology! We all owe a debt to SawStop’s inventor for forcibly creating this market, and it’s great to see new approaches towards the same goal: ten-fingered woodworkers!!
Very interresting system.
Wow!!! What a cool saw!! Like you I'd love to see some of those features incorporated in a hobbyist saw.
It definitely looks like I need a lottery win in the next few weeks. I know there are add-ons to regular saws that provide the sliding feature, but the LED/Camera setup is definitely a game changer. The add-on sliders are just that, they're an add-on and not integrated and engineered into the saw itself. This makes them feel a bit out of place, no matter how well designed they are. I would love to have a saw like that, for the DIYer/small scale woodworker. It would be something to hand down to my children and grand children and possibly even my great grand children. Definitely an investment in the future of wood working in general. Can't wait to see what else you show from AWFS, since it would be quite a while for me to be able to go to one of these shows and they don't have anything, anywhere near as elaborate up here in the Great White North.
@cuebj
11 ай бұрын
Time for me to start doing lottery. Then buy much bigger house with land for big workshop... in southeast London... with permission to use machinery in a residential area or create a huge basement... £3million, minimum
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
How far north are you into the Great White North?
@chrisflavelle1200
11 ай бұрын
@@BradSnyderAltendorf Currently 40 minutes northeast of Calgary in a small town called Beiseker, Alberta. I may be moving a bit further north to help look after my parents, who live in Lacombe, Alberta.
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
@@chrisflavelle1200 Got ya, well Akhurst Machinery would be your go to then. I was kinda hoping you were in Alaska, give me an excuse to go up there and do some business while also visiting my brother and his family!!😄
We have both at work. The Altendorf is an amazing industrial machine, but way too expensive for medium to small shops. We hate our two SawStops. They fire the cartridge once a month without touching the blade.
Seems super cool but would be even better if they could integrate the SawStop idea into it as a backup once the patents expire. Software can bug out but an electronic circuit that trips if something grounded comes in contact with it seems more reliable.
I saw it here first! Thank you!
From a layered safety perspective, it would be great if a saw contained both technologies. If the hand recognition ever failed for whatever reason, the SawStop sensor could back it up. Thanks for sharing!
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
one of the reasons we pursued this was to allow the operators to cut ANY material on their saw. A capacitive system cannot cut aluminum, concrete/masonry products, "wet" hardwoods but our system has no issues with these and other materials causing false activations.
@user-rn9rh2bb6n
11 ай бұрын
@@BradSnyderAltendorf Excellent points that I did not consider while looking through my “wood working” safety glasses. It’s an impressive machine and I applaud the engineering and technology that went into it. Now, how do you get a brochure packaged into every “Safety First” banner shipped to carpenter/machinist shops ? ;)
@BradSnyderAltendorf
11 ай бұрын
@@user-rn9rh2bb6n 🤣🤣🤣 I'll have to look into that one!
@YaH_Gives_Wisdom
11 ай бұрын
@@BradSnyderAltendorfWhy did you not demonstrate the most likely scenario of an accident & that’s a hand being pulled in from the back/side from a kickback? People don’t generally put their hands in the path of the saw, the hand gets sucked in in a milisecond during the cut.
Nice i figure in about 10 years the technology will be available in saw that the average woodworking can buy
That thing's footprint is larger than my entire shop, but I LOVE the tech! Thanks for reporting.
That is fantastic. Maybe someday it will be incorporated in hobbies level saws.
Pretty awesome! It's like laptops and PCs when they came out. Over 4 grand. Now you can get a decent one for less than a grand. Nice to see a real competitor to the Sawstop.
@AlAmantea
11 ай бұрын
at almost $70,000, it's really not a competitor at all.
Next up - would love to see a solution for bandsaws. A lot of exposed blade and close hand activity - with plenty of unpredictability in the work.
@dubi127
11 ай бұрын
i am sorry, but i cant really see an option for bandsaws... simply because where would the saw blade go? maybe some kind of resiprocating band saw, using just a section of a saw blade, being pulled down through material by the motor and back up just by spring tension, in an event of hand coming close, the connection of the blade to the motor below would release and the blade would "jump out" in a safe way on the back stroke? but then again, you loose the speed and advantage of using a bandsaw in the first place...
@YaH_Gives_Wisdom
11 ай бұрын
Only way for bandsaw is stopping it dead like Sawstop
@tyrannosaurusimperator
11 ай бұрын
@@YaH_Gives_WisdomYou could just shear through the blade. That would require a pretty strong housing to contain, though.
@YaH_Gives_Wisdom
11 ай бұрын
@@tyrannosaurusimperator & what, have the 2 ends flying and warping uncontrollably, potentially making it even worse?
Very cool approach. Hopefully this approach to safety can work its way down to some models that are within reach for hobbyists too.
Very cool tech!
Great innovation and hopefully one day itll be affordable. Sawstop lobbying the US govt to mandate his tech completely turned me off that company.
Here in the US most big shops are using CNC for panel processing, the mid size and small shops like mine are still using sliding table saws, id love to have one, but that is a hefty price
The tech looks very promising! I guess if I win that lotto tomorrow I could clear out my *entire* garage and fit one of those! lol
That is amazing - glad to see technical advancement in carpentry