Riving knife
A riving knife or splitter is a safety device on table saws, circular saws and radial arm saws used for woodworking. They are both comparable in their safety function, but they are distinct and different devices, each with its pros and cons.
Splitters are fixed in relation to the saw table, riving knives are fixed relative to the blade and move with it as blade depth is adjusted.
Function
Table saws are typically used for two functions - cross-cutting and ripping. Cross-cutting is slicing a board across its width and across the grain of the wood. Ripping is cutting a board lengthwise, along the grain. As wood is ripped, but before the two pieces are completely separated, pre-existing stresses in the wood are released. The partially cut board may move, twist, or very commonly the gap or kerf closes up and the two separate halves of the cut press together and jam around the saw blade.
Kickback accidents
This "grabbing" is a feature common to all ripping operations and may occur with hand saws, or bandsaws too. It is more dangerous with a circular saw as areas of the blade close to the cutting area are moving in different directions. If a bandsaw grabs, the wood is pressed safely down into the machine table, as normal, and the saw may either jam, stall or at worst break the blade. If a table saw grabs, this is likely to be at the rear of the blade, where the teeth are rising up from the table and so may lift the wood upwards, out of control. The wood is then likely to catch the teeth on top of the blade and be thrown forwards, towards the operator. This accident is termed a "kickback".[1]
A second form of kickback may occur if the saw's fence is mis-adjusted, so as be slightly closer to the rear of the blade than the front, rather than being accurately parallel. In this case the fence pushes the wood into the saw blade, leading to a similar result.[2] This is especially likely when cross-cutting sheet materials that are wider than the cut length. These may pivot on the table and jam against the blade. If a proper cross-cutting jig is not being used, the fence should at least be adjusted (either slid forwards or a false fence added) so that the end of the fence stops alongside the blade.[3] Beyond the cut there is thus a free space for the cut-off to pivot into, without binding.
A third form occurs when a loose piece of wood, freshly cut free, slips against the back of the blade. Apart from the measures above, this "falling board"[4] may require an assistant to control it.
Prevention
Splitters are stationary blades mounted behind the blade, and of similar thickness. If the kerf grabs inwards, it will first grab onto the splitter rather than the moving blade.[5]
The thickness of a splitter should ideally be greater than that of the saw blade, but thinner than that of the saw kerf. As modern saw blades use inserted teeth of tungsten carbide that form a wider kerf than the metal of the saw's disk, this is now a possibility.[5] Old, or low-cost, saw blades may use a disk that is approximately the same thickness as the kerf they leave, making them more susceptible to grabbing and kickback. These blades may be avoided for just this reason. Even an inserted-tooth blade is still full-thickness across its rear teeth, and so their thinner disks are no guarantee against accident.
Splitters
Table saws are sometimes equipped with some kind of "splitter", a stationary blade of metal or plastic that holds the kerf open behind the blade.[6] It prevents the slot cut into kerf from closing behind the blade on a rip, or allowing the stock that may bind between the blade and fence from getting caught by the teeth on the back of the blade.
Riving knives
A riving knife differs from a simple splitter in some important ways:[7]
- It doesn't need to be removed from the saw when cross-cutting or doing a blind (non-through) cut as it doesn't extend above the top of the saw blade. If it isn't removed, the operator can't forget to put it back on.
- It sits closer to the back edge of the blade, making it much more effective - less space for the stock to shift into the path of the blade
- It provides some additional protection for the operator - blocking contact to the back edge of the blade - in those situations where the stock is being pulled from the outfeed side of the saw
- It's independent of (and won't interfere with) other blade guards and dust collectors
It achieves all of this by being attached to the same mechanism that mounts the saw blade, allowing it to move with saw blade as the blade is raised, lowered and tilted. To work properly, the riving knife thickness must be greater than that of the saw blade and less than the width of the kerf.[8]
As well as table saws, riving knives are also fitted to hand-held circular saws, and to cross-cut saws ("chop saws").[9]
In 2009, Underwriters Laboratories (UL) will require that all new table saw designs include a riving knife.[10]
Other anti-kickback devices
Featherboards
Featherboards are sprung fingers that apply downward pressure to hold the workpiece against the table. They can reduce the risk of a kickback developing, but will not restrain the board if one does occur.
Kickback pawls
Some US table saws are fitted with sharpened ratchet teeth on free-swinging pawls attached to the guard. These are intended to restrain a board during a kickback, but require awkward adjustment and are ineffective compared to the simple splitter.[11]
References
- ↑ Kirby, Ian (1998). The Accurate Table Saw. Cambium Press. pp. 10–11. ISBN 978-0964399952.
- ↑ Kirby, Accurate Table Saw, p. 40
- ↑ Kirby, Accurate Table Saw, p. 96
- ↑ Kirby, Accurate Table Saw, p. 23
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 "Circular saw benches - Safe working practices". Health & Safety Executive, UK.
- ↑ Kirby, Accurate Table Saw, p. 36
- ↑ "Fight Kickback with a Riving Knife". Fine Woodworking.
- ↑ "Riving Knife Selection". DEWALT Industrial Tool Co.
- ↑ "Safe use of manually operated cross-cut saws". Health & Safety Executive, UK.
- ↑ Stationary and Fixed Electric Tools UL 987
- ↑ Kirby, Accurate Table Saw