Ah ok. That makes sense then why all the US videos have these really long solid looking fences on their table saws, but all the ones I was looking at for sale here have quite short flimsy looking fences.
Those long solid looking fences are a major reason why American forums have more than their fair share of stories about kickbacks. Kickbacks are sometimes caused by wood which bends away from the saw blade when it is cut, ending up jammed between the blade and the extra long fence. When that happens the timber can be thrown back at the operator at around 100mph. It's called a kickback - and because walnut is steamed to get that beautiful consistent colour, it is rather prone to this sort of behaviour. European short rip fences (the "short flimsy ones") are actually considerably safer to use because the fence doesn't extend past the blade, so if you are sawing timber which divides this way it can't get itself caught between the fence and the blade
because there is no fence to trap it.
Almost all the US videos I have seen, and they all make really great stuff, are using their table saws for almost everything. Cross cuts - they make a cross cut sled. Edge jointing - they make a jointing sled. For cutting rebates and grooves - they are removing the riving knife and making multiple passes to cut the groove or the rebate out usually with some sort of sled as well. Etc etc.
That's because they often don't know about any other machines. Cross cuts are faster and more accurate done on a mitre saw; have you ever thought about how to crosscut a 16ft length of skirting or an 9ft length of rough sawn timber with a sled when you have an 10ft wide shop containing a bench, etc? Edge jointing? Did you know that other than some industrial users American DIYers didn't know what a planer/thicknesser was until maybe 10 years ago (they've been common in shops in Europe since before WWII). Cutting rebates and grooves? Never heard of a router? Believe me when I say that dado heads aren't the wonderous thing they are cracked-up to be, and that part of the reason Yanks use them is because they have access to cheap plywood and so have never bothered to learn how to make furniture other than by making grooves in planks. Take the riving knife and crown guard off and you've increased the risk of a pinch kickback (where the timber contains tensions which causes it to pinch the riving knife as it's cut - no riving knife and it will pinch the back of the blade instead - whilst the crown guard reduces the chances
if you have a kickback of having the kicked back piece of timber thrown back into your face (it can still get you in the groin, though, if you are stupid enough to stand directly behind the blade) whilst simultaneously ensuring that you won't plant your hand on a spinning blade if you lose your balance and falling forwards, putting out a hand to stop your face hitting the saw bench (presumably because you were smacked in the face by a kicked-back piece of timber).
I will await some Herbert who tries to pull me up on these comments, but American practices were in many cases outlawed in European trade shops decades ago because they aren't safe and they were responsible for many injuries. Call me a pussy, but I happen to like the fact that I can still count to ten on my fingers, unlike the old wood machinists you used to meet when I was an apprentice who were routinely missing at least one finger (often the ring finger), and sometimes more.
There's also tonnes of videos which say that a proper jointer or planer/thicknesser is not needed. The ones that do have a planer but not a jointer, make a sled for that too and use shims to get a flat plank. Some use a router against a flat edge template.
Only Americans could be so ignorant. The safest, fastest and easiest way to plane something is on... a planer! FFS a basic planer/thicknesser can be had in the UK for under two tons (see above), so why on earth would anyone want to get an only slightly cheaper thicknesser and build jigs for it? Proof that there are some people out there who would invent a square wheel, maybe...
Oh also all the US guys seem to use the gripper push blocks on top of the piece, rather than a push stick from the rear.
Both ignorant and stupid, but at least I can demonstrate that with a video (from the USA, no less!). If you have a kickback as your hand glides past the unguarded, riving-knifeless blade on your saw and you lose your balance, where can your hand end up? In the blade. Who will win that argument? The blade, every time, hands down...
Congratulations. You have now picked up almost every error (well, not really) which would cause you to be red carded in a trade workshop and which would sooner or later result in you having an accident. YouTube is actually a terrible place to learn about safety, but if you want to see a kickback, on a table saw, demonstrated
by an American, watch this video:
Note the "really long solid looking fence", the lack of riving knife and crown guard which can contribute to kickback, and how close the guy's hand comes to the saw blade because he is using that stupid, bloody push pad instead of a long British-style push stick.
BTW, UK major accidents on table saws are reckoned to be proportionately under 1/3 of the number in the USA. I believe that's based on hospital records for amputations and stitches and I recall seeing a graph at a RoSPA (or maybe HSE) safety presentation I once attended
It's your choice what you do - but remember that some accidents are very painful and they can't always be undone that easily - like my erstwhile gung-ho colleague and his big toe for a thumb (and if he sucked his thumb do you think he'd end up with athlete's tongue, I wonder?)