I have this saw. Bought a Dado insert plate, and am now using 7.25 Circular saw blades. I don't cut much thick lumber, and the battery lasts longer. I also built a cabinet for it with left side and front extension tables. Both fold down.
Extension tables sound very handy. I may have to build some. I never thought of running a smaller blade. Sounds like an interesting idea to get longer runtime.
@10:10 the push stick should be used between the fence and guard, using the push stick on the opposite side of the guard will make the two pieces of boards pinch the blade and can cause a kick back.
Agreed. I did this same cut and threw the 1 inch piece 20 feet and broke the glass on my dryer door. Please put the push stick on the cutoff piece. It cost me $152 to replace the glass
@@MarkThomasBuilder yeah I watched this whole video waiting for you to take a piece of wood to the face. I've seen a big table saw kick an 8x10 sheet of MDF across a shop before.
This is the 2nd M18 table saw video I’ve watched in the past two days with nobody using the included riving knife. Guys, kickback is no joke! Think smart!
Great review thank you. I have been watching g reviews on this saw for the past couple of months, you are the first one to cut a 2x4 an oak one at that, this seals the deal on the Millwakee
Got this table saw back in September and still havent used it yet lol. I will soon tho once it starts getting warmer and have more day light after getting home from work
Mark, great great review. The quick braking feature is enormous. I remember my first kickback experience and luckily no one got hurt but it was something I'll never forget.
QUESTION OF THE DAY: Does this table saw have all the features you're looking for in a job site saw? What type of projects do you most often use a table saw for?
Nice review was glad to see the Dado stuff that was one of the many reasons I bought this saw. It’s been a champ so far and I hardly ever have to charge the 12.0ah battery I love it
Probably nice for light trim work, however as a jobsite saw that needs to cut any amount of wood you'd probably be swapping batteries all the time. I picked up the Hitachi 10" for 299 at Lowes last year and its got great power and fence, nice wheelie stand, though plug-in. Don't know the price on this, but I'm betting its a pretty expensive low-duty rate saw. Best thing someone could do if buying this is buy a thin kerf blade.
Good video, I'm considering this saw... Can we use other lower amp hour batteries in the M18 range if your 12 Ah dies during a job? i.e. 5 Ah, 6 Ah, or 9 Ah M18 batteries. Got another sub. 😄
Greate video! Although I've had this saw for almost a year, I definitely learned a few things. Btw, I tried to find the dado throat plate but could not find it?
I move mine around all the time by lifting it, not dragging it and it's doing well. I'll have to take a close look and see if there's any issues on the horizon.
Do you think your battery pack mod could run this saw from the wall safely? I'm interested in the table saw, but I don't like the idea of being stuck running on batteries. at home.
You can get a wider throat plate at a few places here in the US, but you have to search around. I would think the other features of the saw in Australia would allow a dado.
Does anyone know if an 8” dado stack would be able to be used with this table saw? I figured that since it’s under the 8 1/4” size that it should work.
The owners manual says to only use up to a 6" dado stack. I've recall reading a comment where someone say they used an 8" dado. If the blades actually fit, then I'm guessing it isn't recommended because of the power required to turn blades of that size.
A little armchair clipboard warrior comment... May want to keep an eye on the locking nut when using dado stack. The braking action may cause the nut to come loose. Kind of related to why dados are hard to come by in UK. Cool video though. I've been eyeing this saw, but not willing to give up the outfeed and support extensions of my Bosch yet. I do love the lightweight, and easy of portability of this saw. Good video.
The TS looks to be a good builder's saw. I always use a splitter - it's the single most important safety mechanism and I see no reason to run saw without one. A kickback problem with an RAS often indicates the wrong blade style (never use a TS blade on a RAS - use a sliding compound miter saw blade) and/or bad alignment, and few radial saws built after the early 60s are worth owning. The old DeWalts are the best.
It’s a nice little saw. I wish it were more powerful.... dual battery may have been better for someone like me. I’d rip a few 2x4’s here and there and I don’t think it would stand up to it. It’s perfect for a Interior Trim Carpenter! It looks very light, quick and easy to set up.
I've seen other battery powered table saw comparison tests and all the single battery units did close to "a few" 100 cuts of kiln dried 2x4's on one battery. The Makita has a dual battery setup that spins the blade faster, has more power, and lasts longer. If you're doing "heavier" cutting than the 2 battery Makita looks like a good alternative.
It's a Flexzilla Whip Hose with a Flexzilla air gun nozzle. I found it on Amazon. It's the thicker of the 2 hoses available. I can't recall if it's 6' or maybe a little longer. It's great for all around use, even in the winter.
Hello, I'm in the market for a new portable table saw and ran across your video. I've just about narrowed my choices down to two: this saw and the dewalt 10" corded saw. Would you recommend this saw over the Dewalt?
My table saw cuts square. I put a 90 degree angle up to the blade all the way up. If you need to make micro adjustments I believe it's mentioned in the instruction manual which you can get online.
Cool. Great video. I saw this saw compared to the flex volt on toolbox buzz. The Milwaukee seemed to win in every category except for accuracy. How do you find the accuracy? What kinds of projects would you consider this good enough for and not good enough for?
Thanks, those are some good questions. I haven't had this saw that long yet, but find it accurate on all the projects I've tried it on. I'll have to check out Rob's video to see his accuracy issue and it's possible that his video was from a saw that he got 2 years ago, when they were first introduced. You can make micro adjustments to the fence and the bevel. It's good enough for ripping material and running dado blades. The not good enough is if you were needing to rip material around 3" or so. This is a smaller blade and only goes to 2.5". That's not a bid deal for me really. The other thing is if you needed to run the saw constantly all day long and only had 1 battery, then you would have an issue. Hope these things help.
@@loucifer323 sounds like you may be thinking of a different video. In the one I saw, they said the Milwaukee has an arbor lock, can take a dado stack, and has an adjustable stand if you have uneven ground you’re setting up on. They also liked the gearing on the blade height adjustment. It just wasn’t as accurate as the Dewalt out of the box.
The push stick is supposed to be used to push the pieces between the fence and blade. When you used the miter guide the fence should have been further away. You are lucky any of your bad habits didn’t send the cut offs right to your head. Nice review of the saw I will give you that.
Thanks, Steven, I appreciate the advice. I'm self taught with some bad habits. I've now corrected some of those things, especially when a shop teacher saw this video and pointed the same thing out. I've learned the proper practices now.
Thanks for the review :) I have one too but never used a Dado stack before so this was good to see. I'm curious if the Australian version is different - how long is the arbor, and is your blade hole 1.18 inches in diameter? It appears more like 5/8" in the video when you remove the stock blade.
You do have to spend some time setting the saw up... blade, fence, etc. But once done, the saw is great. Fairly compact which is Nice th-cam.com/users/postUgkxXh-4_3-ZT1fFWP91ZV7iVqzElr0lEb-a I did get an Incra Miter Gauge which takes some setup as well. The stock miter gauge can be adjusted in the miter slot with a little painter's tape... this tightens up the side to side play a lot.
You did a good job on the video but it was hard to watch with you cutting a 1/2” between your fence and blade and pushing the opposite side of the blade.Move your fence over and adjust for the kerf cut and cut the half inch off the other side. To make that worse you wasnt using the riving knife, aside from one demonstration cut. That’s the first step and probably single most important piece to prevent kickback and you pushed your boards through on the opposite side of the blade. That seems a little unsafe. It works just fine until that one time it doesn’t. Then it’s disaster.
@@MarkThomasBuilder No,no,no. That was not his point. A feather board is not the answer. Using your pushstick on the piece against the fence and NOT the offcut is.
@@fonimer I was self-taught and had this bad habit which I stopped doing a year ago. Someone pointed out the issue. I'm thankful for the community here to help promote safety. Thanks for sharing.
@@ddoleiden Yes thats it exactly. It happened to a coworker at his home 4 months ago and he is still off work. His gloved hand was sucked into the tablebsaw blade. It sliced his thumb in half along the bone (it could not be saved) and cut the top half of his index finger off. Very scarry stuff indeed. Ditch the gloves, and always respet the saw. Take care.
I make it my ultimate goal to always keep fingers away from the blade, but constantly get splinters in my left hand from applying fence pressure while sliding the wood into the blade. So, tight fitting gloves are my only fix for that. I do know the danger and never let my guard down.🤔
@@jerryhedrick not all gloves are “bad”. Plastic gloves won’t do anything if caught. But, like you, I just keep my fingers away! I’ve heard of many tables saw “accidents” over the years. Rarely have I ever seen a true accident. Someone was doing something they shouldn’t do or not doing something that they should do. If you’re being safe, this “glove issue” is a non-issue.
You know there is always a cloud of jerk asshoools out there. You didn't do anything I wouldn't do. I am going to buy that saw now. That means I have or have had just about every saw there is. A Craftsman 12 INCH table saw is a real gem. I got it at a yard sale 40 yrs ago never saw one before or after. 230 vac rips 4 bys. Delta Unisaw check. If the people who have to hang a bunch of Disco Metal flake crap on their saw so there safe.... LOL.. LOL. I want to be able to SEE WTF is going on.... In other words.. WHAT I AM DOING. JUST put a blindfold on. push stick /feather board maybe. SHARPEN YOUR BLADES... I SHARPEN NEW BLADES..!
I have this saw. Bought a Dado insert plate, and am now using 7.25 Circular saw blades. I don't cut much thick lumber, and the battery lasts longer. I also built a cabinet for it with left side and front extension tables. Both fold down.
Extension tables sound very handy. I may have to build some. I never thought of running a smaller blade. Sounds like an interesting idea to get longer runtime.
@10:10 the push stick should be used between the fence and guard, using the push stick on the opposite side of the guard will make the two pieces of boards pinch the blade and can cause a kick back.
Good point. Thanks for sharing!
Agreed. I did this same cut and threw the 1 inch piece 20 feet and broke the glass on my dryer door. Please put the push stick on the cutoff piece. It cost me $152 to replace the glass
Agreed 👍
@@MarkThomasBuilder yeah I watched this whole video waiting for you to take a piece of wood to the face. I've seen a big table saw kick an 8x10 sheet of MDF across a shop before.
He's gonna learn the hard way
This is the 2nd M18 table saw video I’ve watched in the past two days with nobody using the included riving knife. Guys, kickback is no joke! Think smart!
Good advice, thanks!
Sharpen your blades. I sharpen NEW BLADES
Great review thank you. I have been watching g reviews on this saw for the past couple of months, you are the first one to cut a 2x4 an oak one at that, this seals the deal on the Millwakee
Thanks for watching!
Got this table saw back in September and still havent used it yet lol.
I will soon tho once it starts getting warmer and have more day light after getting home from work
Michigan has some 60° days this week. I’m hoping to get outside with this saw too.👍
Excellent review and nice that you did the Dado blade test
Thanks Erwin, glad to hear it.
Mark, great great review. The quick braking feature is enormous. I remember my first kickback experience and luckily no one got hurt but it was something I'll never forget.
Thanks, man. I know what you mean. Scary stuff.
It always amazes me to seeing experienced carpenters using tools wrong and dangerously
QUESTION OF THE DAY: Does this table saw have all the features you're looking for in a job site saw? What type of projects do you most often use a table saw for?
That can do more than what do for my need for a table saw
Nice review was glad to see the Dado stuff that was one of the many reasons I bought this saw. It’s been a champ so far and I hardly ever have to charge the 12.0ah battery I love it
Very impressive review. You went through all my questions! Thank you much!
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for the information keep up the good work.
Thanks, will do!
It was great my friend. very professional Milwaukee is one of the best👍👍👍👏👏👏👏👏
Thank you, I agree, this saw is one of the best.
@@MarkThomasBuilder 👍
You are very good at making videos! Thank you for this! Your awesome!
You're welcome Arber. I appreciate it.
Awesome intro video Mark. Keep up the great work!
Thanks, Marquezlee!
Newbie and your doing my head in.. I’ve been hearing over n over to never use the miter gauge with the rip fence.. what gives? Great vid by the way
Thanks for the video Mark!!!
You bet!😄👍
Thanks. very instructive, I just purchase one but Steel in the box, a New toy...for me, thanks for that review.
Glad I could help and enjoy the new saw!
Well done video. Engaging and extremely helpful. I'm getting one of these bad boys!
It's one of my favorite woodworking tools. Easy to store/put away, cuts nice, and runs off M18 batteries.
Would like to see a demonstration of what that small movable fence is that is behind the regular fence.
It apparently has two height adjustments.
I have one of these saws. Like it a lot. Can't find the plate for the dado blades. Looked on Milwaukee site and Amazon. Any suggestions?
Yes, I found one at Ohio Power Tool. I had a good experience buying from them.
Well done, Sir! Thank you!
You bet!
Probably nice for light trim work, however as a jobsite saw that needs to cut any amount of wood you'd probably be swapping batteries all the time. I picked up the Hitachi 10" for 299 at Lowes last year and its got great power and fence, nice wheelie stand, though plug-in. Don't know the price on this, but I'm betting its a pretty expensive low-duty rate saw. Best thing someone could do if buying this is buy a thin kerf blade.
I would like to see how many LFT of 2x material it can rip on a single charge. I'll have to look for a good thin kerf blade like you mentioned.
@@jamesvillwok7527 Interesting idea, Jim! I might just have to test that out sometime.👊
I really don't think it has any issues. I know so many that use this on their sites
Good video, I'm considering this saw... Can we use other lower amp hour batteries in the M18 range if your 12 Ah dies during a job? i.e. 5 Ah, 6 Ah, or 9 Ah M18 batteries. Got another sub. 😄
You can use other batteries, but the 12Ah works best. Thanks for the sub!😎🙌
Greate video! Although I've had this saw for almost a year, I definitely learned a few things. Btw, I tried to find the dado throat plate but could not find it?
Thank you. I looked online for that dado plate and only found the option to backorder it from Ohio Power Tool and maybe 1 other place.
As a HUGE Dallas Stars fan…I LOVE the hat
That's awesome man, thanks for sharing! 👊
did you link the dado set you recommend for saw ? could you ? please and thank you .. ... I just got this home yesterday !!
I didn't see 6" dado blades from Home Depot. Here's an Amazon link to a Freud set: amzn.to/3wGnONk
Great review...no b.s. just the facts and your experience with the product.
Thanks man, I appreciate that!
A number of people have mentioned that the leveling feet have a tendency to fail or get lost... what has been your experience with this.
I move mine around all the time by lifting it, not dragging it and it's doing well. I'll have to take a close look and see if there's any issues on the horizon.
I have dewalt batteries do you think there is enough room for an adapter on that saw ? tkx
I'm not sure about that. I'd recommend sticking with M18 batteries.
Do you think your battery pack mod could run this saw from the wall safely? I'm interested in the table saw, but I don't like the idea of being stuck running on batteries. at home.
Milwaukee currently doesn't have a battery adapter to plug this in to AC power.
Here in Regional Australia, I enquired about Dado Setting, and was told by Reseller - NOT Available??
You can get a wider throat plate at a few places here in the US, but you have to search around. I would think the other features of the saw in Australia would allow a dado.
Thank You! I'll Restart investigation!
Can you share the link of the hose that is connected to the milwaukee compressor and the air connection
The hose is part of the Milwaukee 8 gallon dust extractor. I have the link in the video description. Thanks.
@@MarkThomasBuilder ok thank you
Great review ......thanks
You bet Michael, thanks for stopping by.👊
What is the max width u can cut? I need to cut 14" wide.
Does anyone know if an 8” dado stack would be able to be used with this table saw? I figured that since it’s under the 8 1/4” size that it should work.
The owners manual says to only use up to a 6" dado stack. I've recall reading a comment where someone say they used an 8" dado. If the blades actually fit, then I'm guessing it isn't recommended because of the power required to turn blades of that size.
A little armchair clipboard warrior comment... May want to keep an eye on the locking nut when using dado stack. The braking action may cause the nut to come loose. Kind of related to why dados are hard to come by in UK. Cool video though. I've been eyeing this saw, but not willing to give up the outfeed and support extensions of my Bosch yet. I do love the lightweight, and easy of portability of this saw. Good video.
Thanks for the info, I'll keep that in mind when using dados.
The TS looks to be a good builder's saw. I always use a splitter - it's the single most important safety mechanism and I see no reason to run saw without one.
A kickback problem with an RAS often indicates the wrong blade style (never use a TS blade on a RAS - use a sliding compound miter saw blade) and/or bad alignment, and few radial saws built after the early 60s are worth owning. The old DeWalts are the best.
Thanks for the advice. I had a Craftsman RAS that was probably from the 70s.
what is a splitter?
What is the max depth (not width) that the 6" Dado stack can cut (using the Milwaukee) ? Thanks.
I just measured and it looks like it’s approximately 1-3/8”
@@MarkThomasBuilder Thanks for responding!
It’s a nice little saw. I wish it were more powerful.... dual battery may have been better for someone like me. I’d rip a few 2x4’s here and there and I don’t think it would stand up to it.
It’s perfect for a Interior Trim Carpenter! It looks very light, quick and easy to set up.
It would be interesting to see how many LFT it could do with a 2x4 on a single charge. I may have to test it out.
It will do 600 feet of rips per one battery
I've seen other battery powered table saw comparison tests and all the single battery units did close to "a few" 100 cuts of kiln dried 2x4's on one battery. The Makita has a dual battery setup that spins the blade faster, has more power, and lasts longer. If you're doing "heavier" cutting than the 2 battery Makita looks like a good alternative.
Why would someone not use the kickback pawls, the blade guard, and riving knife?
It's a good idea to use all of those. I feel that most alway have the riving knife but don't always use the other items for some reason.
@@MarkThomasBuilder Thank you. I'm new to table saws and was wondering if there was some advantage to not using them since it seems many do not.
how is it possible to measure anything accurately in inches?? might as well say it looks like it cut equal!
My guy, offcuts gotta go on the outside of the blade! Super dangerous to have it between the blade and the fence
Thanks for pointing that out, you are correct. I changed my ways awhile back from all the comments. I appreciate this community! 🙌
What kind of air hose kit do you have on your Milwaukee compressor, great video. 👍🏼
It's a Flexzilla Whip Hose with a Flexzilla air gun nozzle. I found it on Amazon. It's the thicker of the 2 hoses available. I can't recall if it's 6' or maybe a little longer. It's great for all around use, even in the winter.
Thanks for the review, I'm thinking in buy it but I wasn't sure...
Just a question, is it good for cutting metals??
I doubt it's rated for that. The M18 Metal cutting circular saw is what I recommend for metal. It has the housing that catches the metal shavings.
Grate Video!! Thank you for sharing 👍
You bet, thanks for the visit.
There is no available Milwaukee table saw on our local Home Depot store here in the island 😔
I've seen some tool shortages lately or on backorder.
Can't seem to find this saw for sale anywhere! All the big box stores in my area just say out of stock, both in store and online!
I believe I provided a link to this at The Home Depot. I just checked online and it says they can have it shipped to my door in 1 week.
Hello, I'm in the market for a new portable table saw and ran across your video. I've just about narrowed my choices down to two: this saw and the dewalt 10" corded saw. Would you recommend this saw over the Dewalt?
Both saws are amazing and I'm sure you'll be happy with either one. If you ever plan on using dado blades, you'll want to go with this one.
Can I use a saw stop on it?
Nope. Saw Stop makes a jobsite tablesaw though.
Instuctions with the saw say to use only 6.5 inch dado sets because of the battery power.
My dado set is 6" and it seems to work well.
can it work well with an m18 8 amp battery????
It will work okay on that for awhile, but it's really meant for the 12Ah.
@@MarkThomasBuilder ok thanks, greetings from Chile!!
Great video. Does the stand come with the saw?
Thanks, Home Depot offers the saw and stand in a combo. You can also get each one separately.
Thank you
Welcome!
How does one go about 0 or square a table saw like this?
My table saw cuts square. I put a 90 degree angle up to the blade all the way up. If you need to make micro adjustments I believe it's mentioned in the instruction manual which you can get online.
Where did you purchase this? I can't find it anywhere.
It's available at Home Depot, I provided a link in my video description.
@@MarkThomasBuilder sold out for me online. And none in in stores in texas.
@@leroyjenkins9623 I just looked and it's not available here either. I'm guessing it will be back in stock soon due to it's high demand.
You should always use the riving knife
Great suggestion. I find myself using that all the time now.
Cool. Great video. I saw this saw compared to the flex volt on toolbox buzz. The Milwaukee seemed to win in every category except for accuracy. How do you find the accuracy? What kinds of projects would you consider this good enough for and not good enough for?
Thanks, those are some good questions. I haven't had this saw that long yet, but find it accurate on all the projects I've tried it on. I'll have to check out Rob's video to see his accuracy issue and it's possible that his video was from a saw that he got 2 years ago, when they were first introduced. You can make micro adjustments to the fence and the bevel. It's good enough for ripping material and running dado blades. The not good enough is if you were needing to rip material around 3" or so. This is a smaller blade and only goes to 2.5". That's not a bid deal for me really. The other thing is if you needed to run the saw constantly all day long and only had 1 battery, then you would have an issue. Hope these things help.
I've seen the same video and Dewalt won every single contest
@@loucifer323 sounds like you may be thinking of a different video. In the one I saw, they said the Milwaukee has an arbor lock, can take a dado stack, and has an adjustable stand if you have uneven ground you’re setting up on. They also liked the gearing on the blade height adjustment. It just wasn’t as accurate as the Dewalt out of the box.
The push stick is supposed to be used to push the pieces between the fence and blade. When you used the miter guide the fence should have been further away. You are lucky any of your bad habits didn’t send the cut offs right to your head. Nice review of the saw I will give you that.
Thanks, Steven, I appreciate the advice. I'm self taught with some bad habits. I've now corrected some of those things, especially when a shop teacher saw this video and pointed the same thing out. I've learned the proper practices now.
4:30
Dont ever do that with the fence
Good point! Safety first
Thanks for the review :) I have one too but never used a Dado stack before so this was good to see. I'm curious if the Australian version is different - how long is the arbor, and is your blade hole 1.18 inches in diameter? It appears more like 5/8" in the video when you remove the stock blade.
I believe it's a 5/8 arbor and it holds a stack up to 3/4" wide. It may hold wider, but that's what it's rated for.
You do have to spend some time setting the saw up... blade, fence, etc. But once done, the saw is great. Fairly compact which is Nice th-cam.com/users/postUgkxXh-4_3-ZT1fFWP91ZV7iVqzElr0lEb-a I did get an Incra Miter Gauge which takes some setup as well. The stock miter gauge can be adjusted in the miter slot with a little painter's tape... this tightens up the side to side play a lot.
Holy sh*t. You need to put that fence way over if you're not gonna have anything holding the peice between the blade and the rail
You did a good job on the video but it was hard to watch with you cutting a 1/2” between your fence and blade and pushing the opposite side of the blade.Move your fence over and adjust for the kerf cut and cut the half inch off the other side. To make that worse you wasnt using the riving knife, aside from one demonstration cut. That’s the first step and probably single most important piece to prevent kickback and you pushed your boards through on the opposite side of the blade. That seems a little unsafe. It works just fine until that one time it doesn’t. Then it’s disaster.
Thanks for those safety observations. I'll keep those things in mind next time.
Absolute Klasse.... Aber fuer mich viel zu teuer
If this had a cord option I would buy it in a second.
They're introducing several new tools later this month. It will be interesting to see if there's any adapters.
I’ve never owned one of these saws. For a cordless saw that has all of those features, the price is that bad.
I recommend it. I like all the features on this saw.
I want it, but man its expensive
Power tools id good I like brother
Thanks 👍
Alot of info
Thanks!🙌
Hey Buddy How Is it Going Sorry i'v been missing out on your nest Videos
Hey Collin, good to hear from you. Hope your doing well. I'll have a new video out in a few days.
👍👌
👋😄
Инструмент крутой слов нет
🤝👍👍👍
👋😄
Do not use 8 in dado blades you have to use 6 in dado blades.
Great advice, thanks!
you've used a table saw before??? keep on pushing the stock on the waste side and find out the hard way i guess
Thanks for pointing that out. I'll use my featherboard next time.
@@MarkThomasBuilder No,no,no. That was not his point. A feather board is not the answer. Using your pushstick on the piece against the fence and NOT the offcut is.
@@fonimer I was self-taught and had this bad habit which I stopped doing a year ago. Someone pointed out the issue. I'm thankful for the community here to help promote safety. Thanks for sharing.
Dam koto
$449 for the tool only.
how much po sir pm mi sir
Okay you lost me at doing a data without the throat plate , extremely dangerous you're lucky to still have your fingers
Good point. I bought a throat plate for dados shortly after making this video. Ohio Power Tool was the only place I found it.
PSA: NEVER EVER RUN A TABLESAW WITH GLOVES ON!
Thanks for the advice 👊
As a beginner I was curious why this is a bad idea. It turns out if you touch the blade with a glove on your hand, your hand will get pulled in.
@@ddoleiden Yes thats it exactly. It happened to a coworker at his home 4 months ago and he is still off work. His gloved hand was sucked into the tablebsaw blade. It sliced his thumb in half along the bone (it could not be saved) and cut the top half of his index finger off. Very scarry stuff indeed. Ditch the gloves, and always respet the saw. Take care.
I make it my ultimate goal to always keep fingers away from the blade, but constantly get splinters in my left hand from applying fence pressure while sliding the wood into the blade. So, tight fitting gloves are my only fix for that. I do know the danger and never let my guard down.🤔
@@jerryhedrick not all gloves are “bad”. Plastic gloves won’t do anything if caught. But, like you, I just keep my fingers away! I’ve heard of many tables saw “accidents” over the years. Rarely have I ever seen a true accident. Someone was doing something they shouldn’t do or not doing something that they should do. If you’re being safe, this “glove issue” is a non-issue.
Shouldn't wear gloves with a tablesaw
You know there is always a cloud of jerk asshoools out there.
You didn't do anything I wouldn't do. I am going to buy that saw now. That means I have or have had just about every saw there is. A Craftsman 12 INCH table saw is a real gem. I got it at a yard sale 40 yrs ago never saw one before or after. 230 vac rips 4 bys. Delta Unisaw check.
If the people who have to hang a bunch of Disco Metal flake crap on their saw so there safe.... LOL.. LOL.
I want to be able to SEE WTF is going on.... In other words.. WHAT I AM DOING.
JUST put a blindfold on.
push stick /feather board maybe.
SHARPEN YOUR BLADES... I SHARPEN NEW BLADES..!
😆🍻🍺😊
😄👋🍻
Kinda copy ow Dewalt table saws, im using dw7492 much bigger but also portable.
They have some similarities. One think on the Milwaukee saw is that it can run Dado blades and Dewalt cannot.
The obnoxious music totally makes your review worthless and unwatchable. You belong on MTV
Learn how to use a saw…the way you cut is an accident waiting to happen
I broke the habit you're referring to. A shop teacher pointed it out to me. Being self taught has its good and bad.
big side a long the fence......its gonna kick.......learn how to use a saw .....then make a vid.....!!!!!
Got it, thanks for the advice.