Consumer choice? Fucking bushit, most people using this stuff are at work when they're doing so. I work kitchens and I'm.thinking about the same application for meat slicers cause I've seen some horrors there and of course any running saw would benefit immensely and it wouldn't even be remotely difficult to implement, you stick a thermometer gun to the thing and if an alive temperature enters that zone it shuts down. It could even serve a dual purpose of seeing the temp of what you're cutting which can be useful for quite a few things that are best cut from frozen but the blade can warm up fast. I could literally build this for like $40 and that's to safely mod industrial equipment, building it in wouldn't cost much at all on what's already a very expensive piece of hardware. A hand detector would realistically make it like $20 more max.
I'd have to look into.the finer points of how the thermo gun is hooked up but you could place it somewhere out of the way of what you're cutting but still near the blade and add a shield to keep the radius of where the thermometer is detecting near the blade, have a general range for human hand temp which will pretty much always be higher thsn anything else in range by a good amount, wire that to a kill switch that you wire to the power supply. Temp guns being a whole digital thing is probably beyond my immediate knowledge, don't know my way around a circuit board too good, but I do know a guy who builds my amps and pedals who for sure does.
I guess just cutting power would do it, cause inertia. I have placed the cart ahead of the horse in that regard. It's sti super doable if built in and you shouldn't have to/its generally not a great idea DIY your own safety features anyway. I was saying I could probably handle it more to illustrate it shouldn't be all that difficult or expensive to implement professionally.
Edit: also I should add even though I hope it's generally assumed, there is no safety implement someone can't get around if foolish enough. This can only ever serve as an additional wall of safety to hand guards etc thsn you should be using anyway. But it's still.dangerous gear and all the safety you can manage practically should be added, redundancy is good when.it can have limbs.
Consumer choice? Fucking bushit, most people using this stuff are at work when they're doing so. I work kitchens and I'm.thinking about the same application for meat slicers cause I've seen some horrors there and of course any running saw would benefit immensely and it wouldn't even be remotely difficult to implement, you stick a thermometer gun to the thing and if an alive temperature enters that zone it shuts down. It could even serve a dual purpose of seeing the temp of what you're cutting which can be useful for quite a few things that are best cut from frozen but the blade can warm up fast. I could literally build this for like $40 and that's to safely mod industrial equipment, building it in wouldn't cost much at all on what's already a very expensive piece of hardware. A hand detector would realistically make it like $20 more max.
How would you build it?
I'd have to look into.the finer points of how the thermo gun is hooked up but you could place it somewhere out of the way of what you're cutting but still near the blade and add a shield to keep the radius of where the thermometer is detecting near the blade, have a general range for human hand temp which will pretty much always be higher thsn anything else in range by a good amount, wire that to a kill switch that you wire to the power supply. Temp guns being a whole digital thing is probably beyond my immediate knowledge, don't know my way around a circuit board too good, but I do know a guy who builds my amps and pedals who for sure does.
How are you going to stop the blade, though? That's the part that is difficult.
I guess just cutting power would do it, cause inertia. I have placed the cart ahead of the horse in that regard. It's sti super doable if built in and you shouldn't have to/its generally not a great idea DIY your own safety features anyway. I was saying I could probably handle it more to illustrate it shouldn't be all that difficult or expensive to implement professionally.
Edit: also I should add even though I hope it's generally assumed, there is no safety implement someone can't get around if foolish enough. This can only ever serve as an additional wall of safety to hand guards etc thsn you should be using anyway. But it's still.dangerous gear and all the safety you can manage practically should be added, redundancy is good when.it can have limbs.
Have you ever turned off an electric motor before?