kevin_thibedeau 2 minutes ago

This needs a movable fence to maintain straight lines.

WillAdams a day ago

Neat!

Would make a nice pairing with:

https://www.make.do/

which is sold by Lee Valley: https://www.leevalley.com/en-us/shop/home/toys-and-games/cra... (an excellent company to do business with).

A prototype of this was on Reddit/Imgur a while back:

https://old.reddit.com/r/DIY/comments/9en02z/kids_table_saw/

with instructions on making one w/ a parts list at:

https://imgur.com/a/kids-table-saw-2cg0HJB

  • lotophage 20 hours ago

    I have the makedo and the screws are legit amazing. I never imagined that they could possibly work so well. It's one of those things I always recommend to other parents.

    The very real downside is that your kids become attached to their creations. So you end up with a house perpetually full of cardboard and fighting a constant battle to part with some of it.

    • itronitron 9 hours ago

      In one of my art history classes we learned of a Bauhaus (or Dada?) artist that would stack their old belongings into the corners of their apartment and then plaster over it in order to reduce the clutter in their home. Might be worth trying out.

    • yojo 9 hours ago

      FWIW, my kids never took to the screws, but are still ridiculously attached to their creations.

      I strive to be open and honest in my parenting, but these battles just don’t seem worth everyone’s investment. A box spaceship that hasn’t been touched in a week is quietly “disappeared” to the basement, and if it’s not inquired after by the end of a month it goes to recycling.

      • deadbabe 9 hours ago

        This just creates trauma that leads to more hoarding behavior as they try to keep things from disappearing in the future.

        Instead, you need to complete the lifecycle of a creation. They should know things they make won’t last forever, and you need to encourage the destruction when the time comes, and after that, they can create a new thing to fill the void, and the cycle continues.

        • IAmBroom 8 hours ago

          Agreed. I know a hoarder (self-described, accurately) who traces it all back to her mom secretly throwing away her toys. She became highly defensive of her "things", to a ridiculous (three houses filled) extent.

          My mother, OTOH, while not the greatest in the world, would ask me to choose which toys were being donated to "other children who don't have any" (Goodwill, probably). I keep things longer than I should, but can throw away the unused from time to time, keeping my house sort of tidy-esque, kinda.

          • smeej 5 hours ago

            If you're going to do it, you really have to pay attention to your kid(s).

            When I was in my early teens, I walked in on my mom going through my brother's toys with a bag in hand to get rid of them. Once I figured out what she was doing, I asked the obvious question, if she'd ever done it to me, and she just nonchalantly asked me if I had ever missed any toys.

            I never had. She actually knew which ones mattered and which ones didn't. These days I miss the magic fairy that comes in and gets rid of the things I don't use anymore when I'm not looking!

          • deadbabe 8 hours ago

            Yup, too many parents just buy mindlessly for their kids without thinking of the exit plan for all this stuff, preferring to just throw it away when their kid doesn’t notice. This gets rid of the garbage but then your kid is left with the impression they can just consume endlessly and there’s always room for something else, they never go through the process of getting rid of things.

      • staplung 7 hours ago

        > is quietly “disappeared” to the basement.

        No comrade. Is better if box spaceship falls from balcony or attends special tea-party.

  • grues-dinner 15 hours ago

    I like the little tools, and actually the price for them isn't so bad (8 pounds, but if on a budget, that kind of saw is on AliExpress for 1 euro).

    The price for the little plastic screws seems a bit nuts though (40p/unit), but I understand it's a razors-and-blades sales model. When I was in primary school, we used those brass split pin fasteners (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brass_fastener) for the same thing. You can even buy metal two-piece "mother and child" rivets 1/4 that price: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/316963279193, but they need a punch and driving it with a nice safe plectrum-style tool is maybe a little fiddlier. Blunt-ended plastic drywall screw-in fittings are also very similar and run about 5-10p each in boxes of 100.

    There seems like a limited age range where a "Scru" is OK but a split pin is not (I know I used them at school almost immediately, and I started at the age of 4). The scrus get tighter, I suppose.

    • citizenpaul an hour ago

      >it's a razors-and-blades sales model

      Nah bro, its a rich people with too much money to notice cash grab all the way down. Those plastic screws are pennies per hundred to make. The tools themselves. Well you can get a 35 piece pumpkin carving set on amazon for what appears to be similar or better quality at <$15USD if you go adjacent to the source on Aliexpress the same toolset is <$3 USD or even <$1

      In fact I'm pretty sure you could just use the most of the pumpkin tools on cardboard, the blunted kid safe ones. They are also meant to be not cut skin.

  • hi_hi 19 hours ago

    Thanks for introducing me to this. I hadn't previously considered there was a range of tools for kids to work with cardboard. It makes perfect sense.

    I'm excited to try some of these with my kid. Paired with the Microbit and bag of various motors, LEDs and sensors, she can really start expanding her projects and imagination. I love it.

    • WillAdams 13 hours ago

      I really wish that Nintendo had teamed w/ these folks for Nintendo Labo.

  • tomcam a day ago

    that looks awesome. thanks for the link

hatthew a day ago

Is anyone else bothered by hyperspecific products like this? 95% of what it does can also be done by scissors for 5% of the price and 10x the lifespan.

  • GuB-42 a day ago

    Cutting thick cardboard with scissors is a good way to hurt yourself.

    You need some strength and a sharp blade to cut cardboard with scissors, for a child, it can mean going full force. And the more strength you use, the less control you have, increasing the chance of hurting yourself. That's also the reason why dull knives are considered dangerous. Scissors are for paper, not cardboard.

    This tool looks much more controllable, which means it is safer, even before considering the intrinsic safety of the mechanism, more precise, and more fun to use.

    • mmastrac 20 hours ago

      I remember the feeling of bruising my joints with scissors as a kid.

      • noufalibrahim 13 hours ago

        I remember cutting chart paper (thin card stock), then corrugated cardboard which was easy unless you were cutting perpendicular to the grooves and finally heavy card which, I agree was finger bruising. There's also some amount of fun in improvising tools from what you have around you. I'm wandering dangerously close to the "back in my day" territory but nevertheless. I think there's a place for childrens tools that are close enough to the real deal but still safe. However, going too far away from the real deal makes it just a toy.

        I got my son some balsa, sandpaper and a sharp knife. I also got him a pair of gloves which were resistant to the blade. Showed him how to use all of those and he's quite good with his hands. Carved a few trinkets for his friends.

        I remember an article about, I think the Inuit, exposing their kids to cutting tools early on in their lives. Can't find the link. Perhaps there's some kind of optimal point in between that balances between "real" and safe.

        • abdullahkhalids an hour ago

          Why knife is good for Balsa?

          I was working on wood 3d model and one piece broke, and I was trying to cut a replacement out of the extra wood available, and couldn't get a cutter to work.

        • IAmBroom 8 hours ago

          With proper education, children (obviously) are safe around tools... Louis Braille notwithstanding. We've had sharps for 40,000 years. Use this one. Don't touch that one until you're bigger. Same as crossing the road: small ones OK; big ones DO NOT GO THERE.

          The problem lies in the words "proper education". Dropped off at school is not sufficient, so kids get blunt scissors that will barely cut.

          • cjbgkagh 5 hours ago

            Your mind will play tricks on you, the last thing you'll think before the accident is 'this is safe'. In machining a technique to fight that thought is - don't touch anything with your finger that you wouldn't touch with your 'pecker'. With falling asleep while driving you'll often think a little nap wont hurt - an absolutely ridiculous thought in hindsight but you're not working with 100% of your faculties 100% of the time.

            There are many activities where accidents are rare but severe resulting in overconfidence. In activities like motorbike riding or gliding aircraft people will convince themselves that they're skilled enough when all that has happened is that they've been lucky, and given enough instances their luck will eventually run out. Knowing the stats can help avoid confusing luck with skill.

            I generally study the stats and even I get caught out, usually when working while fatigued so I simply have to refuse to work when that happens - the accidents are not worth it.

          • strken 7 hours ago

            My woodworking teacher in highschool was missing two fingers on his right hand. I don't think anyone is 100% safe around tools, child or adult, educated or otherwise. Life's about risks and how you manage them.

            Which is not to say that kids can't be trusted to use tools! It's just that they're probably more vulnerable to overconfidence and complacency than adults, who are by no means safe from these things themselves, so it's probably better to let them cut themselves once or twice on a sharp knife before you let them use something with more permanent consequences, like a bandsaw.

      • labster 18 hours ago

        See, it builds character!

        Kids get really dull scissors, shared with other kids. Of course they’re difficult to use.

        • TeMPOraL 16 hours ago

          Doubly so if you're left-handed.

          I thought left-handed scissors are some bullshit sales tactic to eke out some extra cash out of clueless people, until I saw someone on HN explain why "handedness" of scissors is a thing - and then I finally connected the dots and realized why my (then) 4yo daughter is struggling with scissor crafts so much. Got her a pair of left-handed scissors and, lo and behold, her cutting improved on the spot.

          (We then bought some more and gifted them to her kindergarten, to make sure she and other left-handed kids have a pair when needed, because the idea was new even to some of the personnel there.)

          • alias_neo 15 hours ago

            The thing about being left-handed, is that as you get older, you generally become reasonably proficient at doing things right handed, because the world is built for right-handed people, but from my experience, never quite get the same level of control.

            I do quite a few things right handed, some I only do right-handed; and interestingly, I have more strength/power in my right arm/hand but have more control with my left.

            Left-handed scissors are something I've known about ever since I can remember, but given how infrequently I use them, I've never bothered to buy a left-handed pair, and continue to just struggle along the couple of times I do need to use them.

            My kids seem to switch back and forth between left and right, but they're still young, so I'm keeping an eye out for either of them being left-handed so I can help make things easier for them (an excuse to get some left-handed scissors perhaps?) if it does turn out to be the case.

          • Freak_NL 15 hours ago

            My house has a number of left-hand scissors for me and my wife, but only since half a decade or so. For most of our lives right-handed scissors dominated, and no one ever seemed to care in schools etc., whereas we did get left-handed fountain pens at some point.

            My son, fortunately for him, is right-handed. I have no doubt that this saves him a lot of frustration.

            If you are left-handed and reading this, get yourself some nice left-handed scissors. Trust me.

            • rapnie 8 hours ago

              > no one ever seemed to care in schools etc., whereas we did get left-handed fountain pens at some point.

              Older generations were actively trained to 'become' right-handed. My father at school used to get slapped on the hand with a ruler by the teacher, whenever he took his pen in the left hand.

            • alias_neo 15 hours ago

              > whereas we did get left-handed fountain pens at some point

              Writing was the bane of my life in high-school, where they insisted we use fountain pens; I had no idea left-handed fountain pens existed. Even with a more suited pen, I imagine it wouldn't resolve the issue of running your hand through the wet-ink you've just laid down.

              That was some decades ago now, and I intend never to write with one again, so there's that.

              EDIT: I just realised I still have my the last fountain pen I used at school (25+ years ago?) in my pen-holder and grabbed it, it's a Parker Frontier, steel with "gold" accent/clip. I still have a strange fondness for that pen despite not ever wanting to write with it again.

              • Freak_NL 13 hours ago

                I think it was one of those phases education went through. My writing isn't bad even, but that is despite some of the pedagogical approaches in vogue at the time. I remember getting a left-handed work book for practising the loops and waves in the first grade as a step before actual writing, and the approach used went so far as to demand left-handed children write with a backwards slant! Pure lunacy for kids learning to write. I never accepted that idea and just went on smudging my paper until ballpoints took over.

                Now I write using a Japanese Kurutoga mechanical pencil. No pens for me if I can help it.

  • 2muchcoffeeman 15 hours ago

    The problem with this kind of thinking is that it doesn’t take into account how annoying other methods can be. Or how tools open up possibilities.

    I can beat 10 egg whites by hand. I’ve done it several times. But it sucks. A handheld electric beater is fairly cheap and way better. You know what’s even better? A stand mixer that cost several hundred dollars.

    Is it worth it? If you bake a lot it’s worth it.

    This biggest problem with this kids toy is that it’s for kids and cost ~$250. It’s really an adult toy or something for the classroom.

    If it was half the price, I’d pick one up, have bit of fun and on sell it or donate to other families.

  • conductr 7 hours ago

    Not at all bothered by this, this is very unique. Scissor skills are important but more so for paper which has limitations versus cardboard. I use a lot of power tools and my kid watches me kind of bored, unable to participate. I could easily see him feeling like we were 'working together' if I had one of these setup in my shop. He also likes to create all kinds of stuff and I'd be interested to see what he'd come up with.

    But, what does bother me is the price, $250 seems steep.

  • jamestimmins a day ago

    I like it from the standpoint of kids not being afraid of power tools. Plenty of adults would never do woodworking because the tools seem too scary. Teaching kids that power tools don't need to be scary as long as they're used safely is a worthwhile output on its own IMO.

    • WillAdams a day ago

      The best advice I ever got re: power tools from an old shop teacher was that before throwing the switch and powering up a machine, to count to 10 on one's fingers under one's breath while reviewing every aspect of the planned operation, and all the forces involved, reminding oneself that one wants to be able to repeat the count in the same way after the switch is turned off.

      That said, I think it's best to maintain a healthy respect for, and even to a reasonable degree to be afraid of the machines and the forces which they can exert.

    • gerdesj a day ago

      "Teaching kids that power tools don't need to be scary as long as they're used safely is a worthwhile output on its own IMO."

      True but real safety first thinking is not something that a purchasing decision will fix.

      I have a scar on one of my fingers that was caused by a broken broom! How bloody naff is that but it bled like buggery and a 1" flap of finger flapped for a while and needed stitches at A&E (for Americans - that's where you pop in and a few hours later pop out, all patched up without a credit card being involved).

      I wasn't wearing gloves. I am a first aider, H&S rep for my company (my company - I care about my troops) and so on. I was sweeping my drive with a broom with a hollow metal tube handle and it partially snapped and hinged and caught my finger and partially sliced a lump. Oh and I am the fire officer and even my house has a multi page fire plan.

      I own a plethora of torture devices - a table saw, multiple chain saws, chisels and the rest. I have skied for four decades and drive a car/van/lorry.

      Safety first thinking doesn't mean that you escape all of life's efforts to kill you but you do get a better chance of avoiding damage.

      A power tool that promises safety might be missplaced. However, this one does not missrepresent itself. It does what it does and it does it well.

      For me, I will be digging out the hand cranked jigsaw when I show the grand kids how to chop off their fingers: A fret saw. However that thing looks like a great introduction to dealing with power tools.

    • daedrdev a day ago

      I feel like you want to teach that they are dangerous and can be used safely when careful. A woodworker I know almost cut their finger clean off despite having years of experience.

      • gerdesj a day ago

        A British magician called Paul Daniels managed to slice some fingers on a table saw. He had been making his own tricks gear for decades.

        Safety thinking can slip - you only have to cock up once when you are pushing an amorphous mass into a blade spinning at say 3000 rpm and lose concentration.

        Table saws, band saws etc and the like are dreadful.

        My wife manages to make a simple drill/driver somewhat dangerous to the point that I have to sometimes fake a reason why husband should take over (yes I am very careful - she's generally sharper than the tool in question!)

    • hooverd an hour ago

      You should maintain a healthy fear of power tools. They're like big cats. You can be familiar, but never get too comfortable.

    • hammyhavoc 21 hours ago

      The first step to respecting power tools or firearms is fearing what they can do when mishandled.

    • mathiaspoint a day ago

      You don't need power tools for most of woodworking anyway. That's a ridiculous excuse to avoid it. I've built furniture and framed buildings almost entirely with hand tools.

      • gerdesj a day ago

        Quite right until you discover a router ...

        • MarkMarine 19 hours ago

          Router is a very dangerous tool, and it will steal from you the joy of creating profiles by hand with moulding planes, one of the most rewarding things in woodworking. This book is a great guide: https://lostartpress.com/products/mouldings-in-practice?srsl... You can get by quite well with a rabbit plane and 3/8" hollow + round and 5/8" hollow + round places. I prefer the HNT Gordon Planes, beautiful hand made planes from australia: https://www.heartwoodtools.com/hntgordon/hollow-and-round-pl...

          • IAmBroom 8 hours ago

            Yet you still probably wear clothing made by industrial looms, using machine-spun thread, instead of retting your own flax in a pond...

            A bit half-assed, wouldn't you say?

            • ted_dunning 5 hours ago

              Treasuring the sensation of making art by hand does not imply somebody is a Luddite in all respects.

              I enjoy hand-crafting small circuits but am glad to use my cell phone to take a picture of the result. I love riding a bicycle but use a car to go 30 miles when needed. There is no contradiction to be had here. Just different purposes.

              Sometimes simple joy is the priority.

          • gerdesj an hour ago

            I own spoke shaves, multiple jack planes, and the rest. My garage is quite literally a torture chamber of devices that a medieval sociopath would dribble over.

            I'm perhaps not quite so distracted by a well rounded fillet in a cast iron or steel body as you appear to be!

            I love all materials and the ingenious ways we have found to fashion those materials. I only recently bought a router because I had to cut a wide and deep rebate in a door to fit a finger handle. Doing that with chisels is possible but a bloody nightmare. An over enthusiastic wack or allowing the grain to take over too much would have needed a potentially ugly repair.

            I speak en_GB so when I say router (spinning power tool) and router (IP packet shuffler) they sound different.

            I've just taken a look at that page you linked and may have to dump my browser cache and try and forget where I saw the link ... 8)

      • JKCalhoun a day ago

        I started with power tools. Moved to hand tools for a year or so when I moved houses and still had my table saw, etc. in storage.

        Now that I my power tools are back in the garage — I can't quit the power tools — right back relying on them. I just couldn't plane quite as nice as my joiner (and certainly not in one pass). And sharpening the hand tools...

        I earnestly want to do more hand-tool woodworking. I keep thinking that, as I get older, I'll eventually full in on hand tools. But at 61 years old ... not yet.

    • drewcoo 21 hours ago

      > the tools seem too scary

      They are too scary.

      Consider table saws. SawStop built its brand on not cutting fingers off, which is scary enough. But it turns out that kickback causes a lot more injuries and that's not really addressed well by any tools.

      https://www.sawstop.com

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ulvP8Vv9SrE

      There ought to be a market for MEs to design power tools that are safer for consumers. So where is the obviously-named "KickStop" table saw? Maybe the decline in the middle class makes that market too small to consider such improvements.

      • WillAdams 12 hours ago

        Safe is a function of training and guards and competence when using a tool and above all an awareness of the forces involved and how to position oneself so that should something go wrong, one will not be in the line of movement of potential projectiles. This means that the first thing one must ask oneself when walking up to a tool is, "Am I well-rested, and sufficiently clear-headed and well-versed in this operation that I will be able to focus on using this tool safely?"

        Sawstop wouldn't have a business model if tablesaw accidents were tried by a jury of shop teachers whose awareness of this is brought into focus by a career of explaining how to safely use power tools (see my post elsethread).

      • creato 19 hours ago

        > So where is the obviously-named "KickStop" table saw?

        It's called a riving knife?

      • hooverd an hour ago

        My recent Dewalt table saw purchase with a blade guard, riving knife, and anti-kickback. So they've gotten better at least.

      • MarkMarine 19 hours ago

        The saw stop creator patented and tried to license his tech (not make a saw,) the major manufacturers didn't want to pay the license fees.

        I sort of get it, for actual job sites using dimensional lumber you're going to have the saw in bypass the entire time because the wood is wet, making the safety moot so the market is there for hobbyists but not pros.

        First thing the "pros" do is remove the guards. I've never seen a guard on a jointer or a shaper at a pro shop. The products fit the demand in the market.

        • mauvehaus 12 hours ago

          I'm a pro. I'll agree about guards on a table saw. The ones we get in the USA are without exception crap. I haven't used a Wadkin or European style saw. I can only assume that as much as they must cost to make, there's some merit to them. A riving knife is a really nice feature and I wholeheartedly recommend leaving it in.

          Shapers are a mixed bag. If you're running enough straight stock making moldings, you've probably got enough featherboards and/or hold downs if not a power feeder set up that you'd really have to try to get hurt. For smaller jobs or curves work, it's a tossup, but yeah, a lot of it gets done without a guard.

          Jointers I'm going to disagree with you: I pretty much refuse to run without a guard. Except for rabbeting, I haven't found a good reason to do so. I have done so in other shops, usually on machines so old that the guard was lost 50 years ago and is irreplaceable. Generally though, if I don't see a guard on a jointer in a shop, I'm pretty wary about what else might be being treated a bit too casually. A guard on a jointer is an easy win with very little downside.

          • bluGill 10 hours ago

            The expensive saws in the US come with good guards. However there is no way you can put a $300 guard on a saw and sell the whole saw for $100. Thus cheap saws get cheap guards that get removed (if they are even installed). Stick with hand tools until you can afford the expensive saws with good guards is my advice.

            The above is about table saws. There are other power saws you should consider instead that are cheap and work. However there is a reason the table saw is considered the king of so many woodshops and until you get a good one you will be compromising ability to do some common jobs. Just because everything can be done with a rock to high doesn't mean most people are willing to do that and I don't blame them: a table saw should be in your plans or shop if you are a woodworker.

            • mauvehaus 9 hours ago

              Out of curiosity: who does make a table saw with a decent guard in the non-industrial price range? Even Powermatic and SawStop ship with guards that suck.

              For the record, mine is a Unisaw from the late '70s. I've got an original Delta sliding table for it that greatly improves dealing with any wide pieces, but it's definitely not the equal of a Felder, for example.

              I would be hard pressed to justify the space for a euro-style slider. I usually have the sliding table off unless I am doing a job that requires it because of the floor space it takes up.

              • bluGill 9 hours ago

                I don't know - I've never had the budget for a nice saw. I've come close a few times, but something else comes up.

                If you are spending $2000 on a saw spending $300 on a third party guard to go with it isn't such big deal. The cheap saws often are not even strong enough to attach the nice guard if you would spend the money.

                • LargeWu 8 hours ago

                  The guard on my table saw mostly serves as a reminder to keep my fingers away from it. I don't expect it would actually prevent any sort of injury.

                  • bluGill 7 hours ago

                    A good guard will prevent kickback and thus save you from injury. Fingers are an obvious risk of a say (and such accidents happen all the time), but kickback is the larger danger and the right guards will prevent that.

                    • LargeWu 2 hours ago

                      On my consumer grade Dewalt, the blade guard, riving knife, and kickback guard are all separate components, so I guess I was considering them separately. I still don't trust the kickback guard fully either, so attempt to stand off to the side if possible if I'm worried about kickback.

          • MarkMarine 8 hours ago

            I agree, my jointer has a guard but you need to pull a little Allen key out to put the guard on/off. That little extra friction is enough I think. Someone needs to rabbet and never puts the guard back on.

            Personally I like my digits, but I’m not in a production shop where every second counts, I just do this for myself and I make my living typing. I would tolerate any amount of friction to keep my fingers in the same configuration they are currently in.

    • ordu 8 hours ago

      > I like it from the standpoint of kids not being afraid of power tools.

      I'm personally cultivating my fear for power tools. I consciously work on it so I wouldn't get used to them and wouldn't stop being afraid. Fear makes me more attentive, more careful, it forces me to think first and to do next. To stop myself when things go not as planned and think again. It is almost impossible to distract me while I'm cutting wood or whatever I'm doing with a power tool. I'm afraid of the tool, I wouldn't let my attention to switch from it while it is powered.

      It is funny, that psychologists believe that fears is a bad thing that must be eliminated. At least all I've talked about fears believed in that. But fears are good, they come with a danger detector included, and they are hard to ignore.

      > Teaching kids that power tools don't need to be scary as long as they're used safely is a worthwhile output on its own IMO.

      I believe, that either "to use safely" or "not scary". There is no middle ground. Though it maybe just my own way to the safety, maybe others know other ways.

      > Plenty of adults would never do woodworking because the tools seem too scary.

      The fears that stop you from doing are probably bad, but from the other hand, before using power tools you'd better learn how to do it safely. I learned all of them from experienced people, who demonstrated me how to do it properly, watched me and explained me what I'm doing wrong. So, maybe, they are right.

      • starkparker 7 hours ago

        > I'm personally cultivating my fear for power tools.

        I get what you're saying, but to get there you have to willfully conflate an irrational fear of unknown consequences with a rational fear of known consequences. The barrier for many adults to power-tool use is the former, which blocks them from acquiring the latter.

  • cjbgkagh 9 hours ago

    I’m pretty sure a nibbler will not wear out anywhere as quickly as scissors.

    It can allow young children to work independently so you’d have to factor in cost of supervision with the scissors.

    Main problem with it is that it is more expensive than many real nibblers designed to cut steel, I guess for now that it is niche and designed for classroom use. Mass market it and I think it could easily come down to $50.

  • preinheimer a day ago

    It is not easy for children to cut cardboard with scissors. I'd say that remains true at least until age 10. Some younger may be able to manage a small amount of cutting but would get tired quickly.

    I volunteer with scouts, kids aged 5-8. We ran a cardboard based activity with the makedo stuff. We tried to supplement with scissors, they were not effective.

    • dylan604 a day ago

      Also, scissors tend to crush cardboard at the cut. This looks like it is not doing that.

  • Retr0id a day ago

    Cutting cardboard in straight lines with scissors is easy, but cutting convex curves other shapes is really not, especially if you want to avoid bending it and collapsing the corrugation. Personally I use a knife, but obviously that isn't suitable for very young kids (not hugely safe for me either lol, I almost cut the end of my thumb off not too long ago...)

    • istjohn 21 hours ago

      Convex curves can be approximated by a series of straight cuts tangent to the desired arc. It's concave curves that are difficult.

      • Retr0id 9 hours ago

        Ah yeah, I meant to say concave.

    • parpfish a day ago

      If convex curves are too hard, just make a concave curve and keep the other side.

      • xattt a day ago

        I am not sure if this is board stretcher-level pranking or actual advice. Bravo!

      • WillAdams 12 hours ago

        The problem of course is that often one side of the curve is mangled/distorted from fitting the tool into it --- guess which one it usually is?

        • junga 4 hours ago

          It's always the side you want to keep of course.

  • tptacek a day ago

    Not at all; you've missed the point. Everyone knows you can cut a box with scissors. The point is that you can't cut a board with scissors. This is a basic woodworking skill, and I think it's great if you can come up with a way to safely get kids accustomed to what those tools can do.

    • michaelt a day ago

      Are there all that many parents who want to teach their kid woodworking, but can't use the classic teaching method of taking them to the workshop and handing them a coping saw under careful supervision?

      I mean, I'm sure there's a handful of parents who value woodworking skills but do no woodworking themselves - but are there enough to support a whole product category of $250 cardboard tools?

      • ckozlowski 8 hours ago

        Depends on the age. I've had my 4yo in my garage with me at times. And while he's "helped" me with a few things, it generally consists of me holding the tool with his hands on the handle as well. His strength, dexterity, and simply small size prevents him from really getting much out of it other than a sense of participation. Valuable, but he's not learning anything.

        When he's older and bigger, then using real tools will be more practical, and we can using the real thing. The risk will be more manageable then.

        At this stage however, this chompsaw looks appealing. Instead of disappointing him when he wants to drive and having to diplomatically explain that he lacks the strength and coordination to use the actual tool, I can just hand him this. Give a bit of instruction, and then let him experiment. That feeling of "hey, I'm doing this myself" is exciting to him and gives him a sense of accomplishment.

        Long story short, I see this as a product aimed at a younger audience who aren't old enough to take the lead (with guidance) in the workshop yet, but want the feeling of doing it themselves in a safe way. I like it.

        $250 though. Ooof.

        • LargeWu 8 hours ago

          Yeah, the price is certainly a deterrent. My kids are tweens/early teens, almost aging out, and while they still like making things with cardboard, not sure I can justify that kind of investment for what is really a relatively simple tool. I mean, my 3D printer barely cost more than that, and that's a high-tech precision machine.

      • schwartzworld a day ago

        I actually think this isn’t really an “at home” toy. A couple of these in an elementary classroom or a library or even a community maker space, make a lot of sense, since the building material is basically free.

      • tptacek a day ago

        I mean, it's a specialized $250 toy, I'm sure it has a very narrow audience! I'm just saying: it's not a scissor replacement.

  • xdennis 12 hours ago

    Agreed. It's like that old Russia-America joke. When they go to space they find out pens don't work because of gravity. Americans spend millions developing a pen which works without gravity while the Russians use a pencil.

    I don't like Russians, but it's so stereotypically American to over-engineer a complicated alternative to scissors.

    • bluGill 10 hours ago

      It wasn't the Americans who spent millions. It was a single American: Paul C. Fisher who spent it own money because he thought Astronauts should have a good pen to use in space. His pen was so much better than the pencils used by both the Americans and Russians that both immediately switched to using his pens.

    • Marazan 11 hours ago

      And just like the old joke your are missing important practicalities.

      Pencils in space were terrible. Small chunks of carbon absorber of and getting in electrics was bad. Pens were a huge improvement.

      Likewise I can't only presume you haven't ever cut large quantities of corrugated cardboard with scissors or ever seen a child struggle with the task. This device looks to be a massive utility increase for cardboard cutting for children.

throwaway889900 a day ago

Maybe it's just me, but I'd rather teach how to use a knife safely? And a cut from a blade is a lesson to be learned, hopefully only once.

Edit: Oh and if anyone's looking for the tool name, it's called a nibbler. This one is just table-mounted, there are power tool and unpowered versions ofc.

  • rtkwe 9 hours ago

    You can introduce this way before you can trust a kid with a knife sharp enough to cut cardboard and they can use it way more independently.

    • conductr 7 hours ago

      Exactly, you're basically telling them you can't build stuff until you're 8+. Which coincidentally is around the age they'd lose interest

      • rtkwe 7 hours ago

        There are other tools you can safely use as a young kid and young kids can use knives etc they just need a lot of supervision and instruction. Hand saws are relatively safe compared to box cutters for example, they're unlikely to cut super deep but working with wood is a lot harder and more expensive. The cardboard hand tools mentioned elsewhere in the comments here are neat though they look like they work pretty well without having any sharp edges.

        • conductr 6 hours ago

          I agree, I'd do the Makedo style tools before this thing. But, I think the other part is this is an indoor activity with these tools. Handsaws would be outside for me (I don't want my house/furniture getting nicked during play).

          The other part is, I simply don't want to heavily supervise their creative play. Everything kids do these days is planned and supervised, building a fort in your house shouldn't be.

          • rtkwe 6 hours ago

            Yeah do the hand tools and if they get into it in a big way this is a neat improvement, looks super easy to cut out complex shapes very quickly compared to the Makedo version.

            I got some of their connectors in an Adabox I think a few years back and they were neat.

  • viraptor 10 hours ago

    > And a cut from a blade is a lesson to be learned, hopefully only once.

    A cut from a simple blade (that can't chop your finger off) can be anything from easily healed to going through just the right part to limit the dexterity for life if you're unlucky. There's lots of time to learn using a sharp knife when they have great fine motor skills already.

dylan604 a day ago

"The nibblings are collected in a bin below, allowing you to recycle the waste."

In my area, this type of waste is not accepted in the recycling. Just like you can put paper in recycle, but you can't put shredded paper. This would work pretty well in the compost pile though.

  • Wingman4l7 a day ago

    Yeah, this is 100% wish-cycling -- and honestly, the total amount of shavings you'd be throwing away after using this device heavily wouldn't even amount to a single small cardboard box.

    • dylan604 a day ago

      I took out my comment calling it wish-cycling propaganda as a selling point, and decided to be less cynical. Anytime I see that kind of obvious play on the recycling heart string as a selling point just makes me throw up a little and roll my eyes all at the same time. The marketing department just goes overboard and nobody calls them on it

      • Retric 19 hours ago

        Recycle is more than just the municipal recycling stream, you can use that kind of shavings for some things. For example use glue to add fur to a cardboard creation.

        • Jolter 14 hours ago

          That’s a good example of reuse, not recycling.

          Recycling means making new cardboard or paper out of old material.

          • Retric 10 hours ago

            The common definition, “Reuse is the action or practice of using an item, whether for its original purpose or to fulfill a different function.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reuse Reusing grocery bags as trash bags is the same item in a new context.

            “Recycling is the process of converting waste materials into new materials and objects. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recycling

            Old tires to footwear is recycling even if you can see the old tread pattern you don’t have a tire at this point it’s a new item, or as I suggested cardboard crap waste to fir on a piece of artwork. The difference is you’re modifying the underlying item for use as part of something new.

            It can feel like a grey area. Upcycled is often used when much of the original item remains, but shredded cardboard isn’t really cardboard as it lacks some of its fundamental properties arising from the 3D structure.

          • bluGill 10 hours ago

            Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. That is an ordered list, you move to the next step only after you can done everything you can in the previous step.

        • asielen 9 hours ago

          If it is clean, can't you also compost it?

          • IAmBroom 8 hours ago

            Or, you know, just bin the 1/2-ounce of shavings.

      • coldpie 10 hours ago

        > and nobody calls them on it

        This is so low on the long list of bad things in the world that it isn't worth the calories burned to type up a callout.

        > I took out my comment calling it wish-cycling propaganda as a selling point, and decided to be less cynical.

        Good call. I thought the comment as you wrote it was perfectly good & useful.

jasonpeacock a day ago

I’ve got one, my 3yr old loves it and uses it with supervision to make large pieces of cardboard into smaller pieces…

A warning, it’s a bit loud, definitely invest in kid’s hearing protection to wear when using it.

  • grues-dinner 15 hours ago

    For 250 dollars I'd expect a motor you can barely hear, not one that needs hearing protection! And at least a partly alloy case.

    Proxxon is a fairly pricy German mini-tool brand, has a far smaller addressable market (i.e. serious miniature hobbyists) and can still sell you a made-in-Europe MP 400 Micro Shaper, a mini router table, with 10 cutters, for about 200. The manual says it's 104dBA, but this video indicates it's actually fairly quiet in practice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KpmzqvHqQM0

    • WillAdams 12 hours ago

      Even so, hearing loss is irreversible --- best to begin a life-long habit of wearing PPE with this tool.

  • sheiyei 17 hours ago

    For $250, it was not worth it even before you told that.

fhub a day ago

My five year old played with this quite a bit at Maker Faire last year. He picked it up quite well. I had it in my mind to get him one for his next birthday but forgot until I saw this post. His school has Makedo tools and he likes them. So the combination might be something that he'd use on a semi-regular basis. We have no shortage of "material" being delivered.

jakedata a day ago

Looks a lot like my glass grinder. Nice idea but only cuts cardboard and $249 is crazy expensive.

Hnrobert42 21 hours ago

This thing is so much fun. My friend's children have one. I was like, "Get the heck out of the way kid. This thing is mine now!"

sonofhans a day ago

It’s basically a tabletop router for cardboard. That’s super cool. The free motion in two dimensions is better than what kids usually get with toy saws and drills.

Routers are great tools but very powerful and finicky. This turns a router into a finger-safe jigsaw, which is a great idea.

  • Doxin 17 hours ago

    It's not quite free motion in two dimensions. The mechanism is a nibbler, not a router. I.e. you can do 90 degree turns just fine, but you can't go sideways. You need to turn the cardboard to make a turn.

IAmBroom 8 hours ago

Cool!

When I was a tyke I had a powertool set that worked on 1/8-inch balsa wood (not easy to find!). It was powered with a 12V radio battery, and Could Not cut fingers. There was a drill (spade bit, so it sucked), a circular saw, and another tool I have forgotten.

Pulled it out decades later for my niece to play with.

This, however, has more input material than 1/8th inch balsa. And thus, more outputs possible.

  • WillAdams 8 hours ago

    1/8" balsa was sold in hobby shops for making airplane wings and model rocket fins.

hinterlands a day ago

The article starts by dismissing scrollsaws as "pretty darn dangerous", but that's a pretty big stretch. They're less dangerous than a sharp kitchen knife. You want to talk to your kids and watch them closely the first couple of times they use it, but you'd be hard-pressed to find any accounts of serious injuries caused by scrollsaws.

This toy doesn't seem bad as a crafts tool that buys you several quiet weekends, but at $250... that's actually more than a miniature desktop scrollsaw (Proxxon 37088).

  • bityard a day ago

    I don't have direct experience with a scroll saw but I own (well, made) a bandsaw and it's my favorite power tool. There's a lot you can do with it but more importantly, it's incredibly safe: The blade stays in one place and will never jump out at you or throw your workpiece into your abdomen. If you let your mind wander, you might end up with a cut on your finger. But that's about it. It's pretty much impossible to lose your finger to a bandsaw unless you have permanent nerve damage or are doing your woodworking on meth.

    • Doxin 17 hours ago

      > If you let your mind wander, you might end up with a cut on your finger.

      If you let your mind wander you might lob off a finger before the pain signal reaches your brain. Band saws are safe in that they are largely unlikely to do anything unexpected. They are very dangerous in that they seem so safe.

      No one is going to messing around with a table saw. The danger is obvious. It's very tempting to be unsafe around a band saw since it seems so safe.

      If you want to see some scary stuff go look up how bandsaws are used in slaughterhouses. They'll use them to lob a whole cow in half in under a second. Now imagine what it'll do to a finger while you're looking the other way.

      • bityard 7 hours ago

        > If you let your mind wander you might lob off a finger before the pain signal reaches your brain.

        I'm curious if you have ever used a bandsaw? Woodworking bandsaws just do not cut that fast. It would take multiple seconds of sustained pushing to get through all the meat and bone, it would be very painful and messy. You have a FAR better chance of cutting off your finger with a sharp common kitchen knife than a bandsaw.

        • Doxin 30 minutes ago

          Woodworking band saws will easily cut that fast. Perhaps not through a hard wood, but flesh and bone isn't as tough as a lot of woods. Go have a look at how fast a band saw will cut through an animal carcass. It's VERY quick.

      • mauvehaus 12 hours ago

        Usually you aren't feeding wood into a bandsaw at the rate they're feeding cows into a bandsaw at a slaughter house though.

        Apart from being a complete dunce, the usual way to get cut with a bandsaw is to be feeding with too much uncontrolled force and hitting a soft spot in the wood or running the blade out of the wood.

        But yeah, when I'm teaching, the safety talk includes the line "Every piece of meat you see in a butcher shop was from an animal that was cut up with a bandsaw."

        If you want to see something truly terrifying, the ones they use to cut up foam are big enough to cut a massive block of foam, and the blade is just a big, continuous band of razor blade.

        • Doxin 11 hours ago

          > Apart from being a complete dunce

          Or growing complacent.

          I think we largely agree on the dangers of a bandsaw to be honest. The only disagreement seems to be how likely it is for a skilled operator to fuck up. Which is for sure debatable unless someone drags in statistics, but given the context I still feel like calling a bandsaw safe in the context of a childrens toy is reckless at best.

          > If you want to see something truly terrifying, the ones they use to cut up foam are big enough to cut a massive block of foam, and the blade is just a big, continuous band of razor blade.

          Yikes, that does sound like the sort of machine I'd not even want to be in the same building with. I sure hope they don't ship those blades coiled up like they do with regular bandsaw blades. You'd need a bomb difusal robot to unpack that safely!

          • mauvehaus 9 hours ago

            I think being aware of becoming complacent is a really good point. If you're doing a bunch of really repetitive work, it's a good idea to take a break and get your head back in the job at hand rather than letting it wander.

            I'm fortunate in that I'm self-employed and get to arrange my work to switch things up as needed. I'm also not usually making a million of anything that would demand doing the same operation for extended periods. I realize that not everyone working in wood has these advantages.

    • MadnessASAP 17 hours ago

      You've never seen the blade of a bandsaw break? Throwing the blade at you is definitely one of the bandsaws failure modes.

  • citizenpaul 19 hours ago

    Yeah I thought it was really cool until I saw the price. Its a toy and costs more than most real tools. I cant help but think everything is a cash grab aimed at the rich nowdays. Maybe it really does cost that much but all I see is some plastic and a <$5 wholesale motor.

    • cap11235 16 hours ago

      And its cutting cardboard. When I was 12, I used an XActo blade for that, and they are definitely under $10. I don't know exactly prices now because I buy hundred packs of craft blades for like 20. This "product" is silly.

      • actionfromafar 15 hours ago

        Cutting cardboard in a nice shape is difficult with a knife IMHO.

  • drewcoo 21 hours ago

    > less dangerous than a sharp kitchen knife

    Which is less dangerous than a dull kitchen knife.

    https://yakushiknives.com/blogs/yakushi-blog-all-thing-knive...

    • phyzome 12 hours ago

      I've been cut way more often and more seriously with sharp knives than with dull knives.

      Everyone says this thing but I suspect it isn't true at all.

      • taco_emoji 8 hours ago

        Right, I think this is one of those myths that catches hold because it's contrarian and has a grain of truth.

        Like I think dull knives are more dangerous than you'd think, but saying they're "more dangerous than sharp knives" is IMO patently false. I've certainly slipped more with dull knives, but... they're dull. They just cannot do as much damage. A dull knife will not take the tip of your finger off. A sharp one will do it before you even feel the pain.

        A sharp knife without proper technique is FAR more dangerous.

  • hammyhavoc 21 hours ago

    > watch them closely the first couple of times they use it

    How about every time?

    • Cthulhu_ 15 hours ago

      That would be overbearing and cost you a lot of time. Kids want to do things on their own, they would lose interest if there's someone looming over them all the time.

      • hammyhavoc 12 hours ago

        So much for parental supervision, huh?

        You would be amazed how many kids end up in A&E due to this mentality.

        > cost you a lot of time

        Welcome to parenting.

    • xyzzy123 21 hours ago

      Depends on the child and the activity right?

      Personally I often prefer to introduce new activities just at the point where I'd feel comfortable leaving them unsupervised (once they've learned it).

      A major goal of parenting is to guide your children to independence. This is a sort of negotiation between you, reality and the child. While it can be heartbreaking when they come to you with injuries, you can't watch them all the time (and it's not healthy to try).

      If you introduce an activity "too early" such that you always have to supervise, it has some advantages for child but can quickly become a drain on you (they want to do that $thing again but you have other stuff to do) and they feel less independent because they always need your help to do it.

      What our family looks out for a lot is "cliff edges". This is where an activity or situation has a high / unreasonable risk vs benefit, and the harm happens quickly and is surprising. These require special attention. Once kids know where the "cliff edges" are they can explore more safely.

tines 3 hours ago

Nice, lingerie ads! Just what I want to see on my kids power tool website.

  • nickpeterson 3 hours ago

    Heads up, I’ve found the tools don’t work well on lingerie.

hinkley 18 hours ago

Everyone has dust collection in their wood shops now because wood dust is a Class 1 carcinogen.

wmeredith a day ago

This is very cool. The price point puts it beyond the toy category though. Maybe that will come down. Great idea.

  • Aachen a day ago

    250$ for anyone else wondering

modeless a day ago

For the price you could get five of these cardboard cutting tool kits. https://www.make.do/products/makedo-discover

  • tptacek a day ago

    If the only goal you have is cutting cardboard there are obviously more cost-effective ways to do that.

    • modeless a day ago

      But these specific tools are similar in that they can't cut skin so they are completely safe for kids, and can make curved shapes in cardboard relatively easily (more easily than scissors at least).

sebstefan 12 hours ago

>an oscillating cutter that's safely tucked beneath a puck-like protrusion

If it's an oscillation cutter it doesn't need to be that tiny, it can protrude just like a real band saw, it won't cut meat

Ariarule a day ago

This could be "bad, actually" if it gives an incorrect impression that power tools are unequivocally safe, rather than somewhat risky but usually safe when used correctly.

  • bigstrat2003 a day ago

    You're right, but one presumably would still teach kids to treat this tool with respect. And given that, it seems safer to me as this won't hurt them when they get careless (as kids are wont to do). That way you get a chance to reinforce the safety lesson before they graduate to the dangerous stuff.

  • stirfish a day ago

    I'm finding that a lot of parenting is teaching my kid that safety is something you have to do, and risks are something you have to look for and understand. For example, brushing your teeth is usually safe, but you shouldn't brush your teeth at a dead sprint down the stairs.

  • taitems a day ago

    Not sure why you've been downvoted so heavily. That seems like a misuse of the downvote purpose.

    But yes, I kind of agree with other commenters here in that maybe teaching absolute respect of a knife/table saw/power tool and its power to maim is a really important lesson that this sidesteps?

mbonnet 4 hours ago

Light injuries from misused tool is an important lesson I will not deny my children.

danfunk a day ago

I help run a Makerspace, will definitely be looking into this. Great idea. I know many adults that should start out on such a tool!

fnordian_slip a day ago

If anyone in here buys it anyway, they could test if it works with leather, too. That would open up a lot of additional projects.

  • Karliss 11 hours ago

    For similar price you can get a metal nibbler. Which is a handheld powertool designed for cutting metal sheets using a similar mechanism. They should definitely have more than enough power for leather although the cleanness of cuts will depend on sharpness and tolerance of blades. You might want to also look into electric shears.

  • AlotOfReading a day ago

    I suspect you could probably work with pretty heavy leather, since the 3mm cardboard it's designed for is going to be pretty comparable to 5-6oz.The bed size might be too small for typical panel sizes though.

    • Animats 16 hours ago

      That thing would be useful for cutting leather to a pattern. Jigsaws just move the leather up and down, leather is too flexible for routers, scissors don't work well on thick materials, and knife work takes a lot of skill.

amelius 11 hours ago

Can it do more than cardboard? Can it saw through plywood? Then it could replace the jigsaw.

wingmanjd a day ago

My wife bought one of these. First one arrived was dead on arrival, but the second works great!

bilsbie a day ago

I wanted this but the price seems way high.

By the way, could this concept be scaled up to cut wood?

  • coderjames a day ago

    > the price seems way high.

    How much is your child's finger worth?

    I'm looking at getting a SawStop table saw so I can teach my child woodworking with slightly more peace-of-mind that if something goes wrong, they'll be less likely to lose one or more fingers. Kids get distracted, they forget what rules you've taught them in the past, accidents happen.

    This is also a tool I'll consider purchasing to provide my child an introduction to the concepts before graduating to the bigger, louder, stronger wood saws.

jstanley 15 hours ago

> The nibblings are collected in a bin below, allowing ...

...the child to spread them all around the house!

adolph 4 hours ago

What is the purpose of a "power tool" that cuts cardboard? Is it for kids with dexterity challenges? Ex: blunt safety scissors to difficult

conception a day ago

Got one of these yesterday that was on sale for prime day. They are super fun!

felixgallo a day ago

I was a little worried in the video by the kid wearing a sleeve. Seems like that could get sucked up into the mechanism pretty quick.

  • solatic 15 hours ago

    Yeah, if they're going to market this as kid-safe, they need to have videos of what happens when child-size fingers are intentionally fed into the machine, when hair is intentionally fed into the machine, etc.

    Almost by definition, you cannot presume (as a product designer) that children will be capable of thinking of their own safety; which is not the same as a parent who knows their child, making the decision to expose their child to developmentally-appropriate risk

    • Karliss 11 hours ago

      > they need to have videos

      The video demonstrating exactly that is pretty much the only thing on the linked page beside few pictures and less than 1 paragraph of text.

  • analog31 a day ago

    I'm a pretty OK machinist, but not a professional. My reaction is to think about long / loose hair, long sleeves and loose clothing, and (unlikely for kids) neckties. Those would be of concern for any open blade cutting machine, grinder, etc.

  • SirMaster 8 hours ago

    How? It's oscillating, not spinning.

    Like a cast saw or an electric toothbrush.

  • Dylan16807 a day ago

    Will an oscillating cutter suck up much of anything?

    • felixgallo 9 hours ago
      • puetzk 7 hours ago

        That's a rotating spindle, which indeed can catch a loose thread and reel it in. An oscillating cuter moves back and forth, so it unrolls just as much as it rolls, with no net pull.

        And if the oscillation strokes are short enough it can saw rigid material while just vibrating jiggly flesh (this is how the saws used for cutting off casts work). Though cardboard is also pretty floppy, so the mechanism here is probably different (mostly the puck guard keeping fingers out)

      • foobarian 8 hours ago

        > Keywords: ROTATING PARTS

        There are no rotating parts in the OP tool

  • petesergeant 19 hours ago

    In the product video they address this concern, and literally show kids covering it with their hair while it's on, and say it's safe

knowitnone 7 hours ago

a pair of scissors costs $10

lupusreal 11 hours ago

A small oscillating scroll saw is pretty safe for kids, I used one a lot when I was a kid. Of course it's not impossible to hurt yourself with one, but losing a finger is quite unlikely. Very different animal than a handheld jigsaw, those still spook me (and aren't very good anyway, IMHO)

jeffrallen 14 hours ago

My kids just take paring knives from the kitchen when they want to cut cardboard. More dangerous, but cheaper. Though they've probably destroyed $250 of knives... Hmm.

ghysznje a day ago

If it's for cutting cardboard, why not just use a pair of scissors?

  • crazygringo a day ago

    Have you tried using scissors to cut corrugated cardboard? Especially trying to cut curves? The difficulty seems self-evident.

    For straight lines you need something like a box cutter -- with scissors it will neither be easy nor particularly straight. While for even medium-sized curves or smaller details you really do need something like this.

    • hinkley 18 hours ago

      It’s possible but tricky. For grownups. Kids will bork the scissors or get a cramp.

d--b a day ago

uh? We used to have a jig or scroll saw when we were kids, it could cut thin plywood, but you could put your finger on the blade when it was working and it wouldn't hurt at all.

  • floxy a day ago

    The scroll saw seems like about the safest power saw that a kid could use. But every one I've ever owned/used could definitely cut human flesh. Maybe someone could come up with one that has a very limited range of motion, so that it works like a cast saw / oscillatory multi-tool, where the teeth movement is so small that it is within the elastic range of your skin.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bx1AiQdMQro

    • whartung a day ago

      Back in the day, I had a Mattel Power Shop. https://corporate.mattel.com/brand-portfolio/power-shop

      It had was a combined jig saw, lathe, drill press, and disc sander.

      Now, I don’t know much about modern scroll saws, but the “blade” on this thing was more like a thin, round file. Perfectly adequate for something like popsicle stick thick wood. It more ground it’s way through wood than actually cutting it.

      I think it would take some pressure to really hurt a finger. I can say there was no real bloodletting on my projects.

      The drill bits were pointed, flat pieces of metal. It was all designed for really soft wood.

    • d--b 19 hours ago

      Yes I think it worked like that. I can’t find any info on it though, this was back in the mid 1980s.

  • alwa a day ago

    Yes—startling, but not catastrophic. I first used something like that at age 6. It probably COULD cut flesh if you really tried, but it would take some determination, and just the specter of damage was enough to keep me on good behavior.

    I remember it as helping me develop a healthy respect for tools, and also to relate to the material world as something I can manipulate rather than something to be passively consumed. And to manage risks, and confront my fears.

  • bradly a day ago

    My kids (8, 10, 12) have all used my scrollsaw with supervision without issue. Jigsaw is a bit more sketchy and reminds me of most the injuries I've seen in the shop around handheld router after the cut is complete. My lathe is the kids favorite tool to be honest.

    • WillAdams 12 hours ago

      Yeah, I am trying to re-arrange my house so that I can make and store and set up and use a spring pole lathe (bodge for the Brits) --- seems a nice fit for kids (and great exercise!).

      • bradly 9 hours ago

        My dream is a spring pole lathe!, but it seems most people make there own, and my skills/confidence are not quite there to tackle that project.

        • mauvehaus 5 hours ago

          I built one out of home center 4x4 posts with hand planes, chisels, and a mallet. I did mortise and tenon joinery on mine, but honestly, construction screws and plywood gussets would probably get you there too. Go for it; you can probably do it!

          Learning how to turn on one is a bit of a trick. A lot of good turning technique is body motion rather than arm motion. Standing on one foot while you treadle makes it harder to do the body motion well.

  • ethan_smith a day ago

    Scroll saws operate at 400-1800 strokes per minute with metal teeth that can absolutely cause serious injury - please don't test this safety assumption with children.

    • bradly a day ago

      Scroll saws, unlike more common woodworking power tools (table saw, bandsaw, router, joiner, planer), is one of the only tools that touching the blade does not typically cause an injury.

      • giarc 10 hours ago

        That's incorrect. A scroll blade is just like any other saw blade, but moves up and down many times a minute. It will 100% cut you if you touch the front of the blade.

        • bradly 10 hours ago

          > A scroll blade is just like any other saw blade

          No, not all saws are the same and treating your tools like that will cause injury to yourself. Different tools have orders of magnitudes of different consequences when a blade is touched.

          I've worked in multiple production and educational woodshops. I've touched running scrollsaw blades and even touched a running table saw blade and seen live a hand into a joiner. These things are no where close to being the same.

          • giarc 6 hours ago

            What are you talking about? Are you referring to touching a blade that is not moving? Sure, you can touch any object that is sharp if it's not moving. I'm referring to an operating scroll saw. You can absolutely not touch the blade when it's oscillating at 1200 strokes per minute.

            • bradly an hour ago

              I'm curious that amount of hours you've spent with a scrollsaw, because you absolutely can touch the blade running. You can touch the back easily, the sides easily, and the front while is may give you a cut, most likely would not give you an injury the same as touch any part of any other saw's blade.

              I understand you if you run your hand into the scrollsaw and try and cut off your fingers, you probably could. But in practice, that is not what happens if you graze the blade. Your hand snaps back, you may get a cut if the teeth got you, but you will mostly likely not be on your way to the hospital. Again, this is very different that other tools in a woodshop. Yes, you can cut yourself. Yes, it is much, much harder to have a serious injury.

    • stirfish a day ago

      I think I know what they're talking about; I had a wood lathe that ran on D batteries, and I think there was a saw version too.

  • jakedata a day ago

    Unlike the woodburning tool...