I would have seconded the lack of riving knife but that would have made me ever so slightly hypocritical, being as I removed the riving knife from my startrite so I could fit a 14 inch blade to it.
On the plus side, I'm only sawing kingspan up with it so the weight of materials being sawn is low and likelihood that it will squeeze together and be fired out of the saw while being sawn is minimal..
Could do with a bit of sanding effort on your table top there.. I see a lot of surface imperfections that could lead to materials snagging. Not having a riving knife could see you twisting the work if it gets snagged, and that's when it comes back out of the saw at a rate of knots and busts you in the chops. Remember, that saw blade is probably doing close to 200 mph and is capable of imparting a lot of energy to the work if it grabs ahold of it
Back to your switch, it's basically an electromagnet.. Pushing the green button fires the magnet, which then holds e contacts closed. Elsewhere a set of thermal wires and bimetallic strips run hot if the motor is overloading and the bimetallic strips move and break the circuit..
So yep, you've bought something a lot more complex than just a make/break switch, but it's a sensible thing to have
On the plus side, I'm only sawing kingspan up with it so the weight of materials being sawn is low and likelihood that it will squeeze together and be fired out of the saw while being sawn is minimal..
Could do with a bit of sanding effort on your table top there.. I see a lot of surface imperfections that could lead to materials snagging. Not having a riving knife could see you twisting the work if it gets snagged, and that's when it comes back out of the saw at a rate of knots and busts you in the chops. Remember, that saw blade is probably doing close to 200 mph and is capable of imparting a lot of energy to the work if it grabs ahold of it
Back to your switch, it's basically an electromagnet.. Pushing the green button fires the magnet, which then holds e contacts closed. Elsewhere a set of thermal wires and bimetallic strips run hot if the motor is overloading and the bimetallic strips move and break the circuit..
So yep, you've bought something a lot more complex than just a make/break switch, but it's a sensible thing to have