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You have my attention with that line. I'm used to thinking of the table saw as the most likely amputator of my shop. What in your experience is the bigger maiming hazard?
In absolute numbers the table saw will win because everyone has one. But they can be used in a safe way - with a sliding carriage, a push stick and a cover or even a saw stop(even though that is a ridiculous shitshow on my side of the pond)you have a near 0% chance of hurting yourself. That is different for a lot of other machines. They can hurt you even if you do things right but are unlucky.
Band saws are far more likely to hurt someone and old planes are inherently unsafe as their spindles often are designed in a way that they often easily send their blades towards their operators. Especially when they are older models. And of course mortisers - I saw some really really gnarly shit over the years, e.g. someone who lost control of their mortiser when hitting an knothole and then the machine went towards his groin - still running as he panicked and did squeeze the handle even stronger by reflex. In the end the half groin area was bloody pulp he injured a major vessel that nearly killed him. A friend of mine collapsed (due to a medical issue) on a table mortiser and missed the blade by less than 2cm. With a table saw he would have simply collapsed on the cover, here it was pure luck.
Wow that's nearly opposite of what I've always heard. Like I've never really heard of mortising machines being particularly dangerous. We're talking the specialized cousin of the drill press, right? Like I don't know how to "lose control" of a Mortising machine.
I've actually seen more injuries at the drill press; bits like to grab sheet metal and spin it right at belly level, give you the first half of a tummy tuck.
I feel much safer using a band saw because it won't kick back on me or generate adverse forces, I guess they're fairly quiet and affable that you forget it's a saw until you start dropping phalanges. Table saws can get ornery.
Or does "your side of the pond" mean you're European and you're referring to different tools than I am? Like in America a "plane" is a hand tool., and my thickness planer would struggle to throw its very well encased knives at anyone.