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Leon[_7_] Leon[_7_] is offline
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Default Flesh Sensing Kapex, Track Saws, Domino ??

On 7/9/2017 3:57 PM, J. Clarke wrote:
In article , says...

On 07/09/2017 11:23 AM, Leon wrote:
...

My guess is that Festool would/could probably introduce this technology
to their Kapex, maybe their planers... I doubt that they would want to
start making a Festool TS with this feature since they now own a company
that does make TS's. Festool seems, at least here, to focus on the
portable power tools. The TS is less portable with the exception of the
job site contractors saw.
I guess Festool could share technologies and maybe offer a better fence
other than the Beis clone. Something like the old Delta Unifence comes
to mind. Maybe not a wobble but perhaps an oscillating blade option for
dados.


I can't see much need at all on planer unless you're thinking of
handheld jobbers (which I guess is all Festool would have, anyway) so maybe.

I think the biggest safety spot albeit not so much in use any more w/
the advent of the larger router is the spindle shaper (or the router
mounted as a shaper). There's a chunk of spinning steel that can do
some major damage in a hurry. I doubt it could meet the proposed CPSC
spec, but it could minimize the trauma otherwise.

Festool'll have to stay out of the equation on the TS from the EU
regulation standpoint or there will be no dado head of any type; EU
reg's prohibit them and I think enforce user compliance by not allowing
an arbor shaft long enough to mount one...


Check again. EU regs require that the saw spin down in 10 seconds or less,
usually accomplished with a brake of some kind. Since the manufacturer
usually wants to use the cheapest brake that will do the job, they barely
put in enough brake to spin down a regular blade in that time, so put a
dado on it and it runs over. The manufacturers address this by putting a
short spindle on the saw so a dado can't be attached. One suspects that
Festool, being Festool, would just stick the brakes off a Mercedes on the
thing.


But dado's are being put on the Euro saws. LARGE massive dado's.

This German saw will cut up to 20 mm dado's. Check the specs.

https://www.stilesmachinery.com/file...-010-00028.pdf

This video shows the massive dado blades.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06PzXIqzQXM

Now maybe these are Americanized, but you have to think that dado's are
being cut in some way with out it being a two machine process. Most
high end Euro saws offer multiple width scoring blades to match the
width of the dado.

And maybe the dado issue is for non industrial use.

I don't doubt that there is some issue with dado blades in Europe but
the videos and specs seem to indicate that they can be cut on the Euro
built saws. And the blades are not thin.