In all my years of driving a 77 there have been very few instances where actually pinning back the guard was needed, and that was really due to being lazy. Even when taking a trim off the right end of a board when the guard doesn't contact the full edge of the board, it still is very easy to just tip it up and cut. I have seen the guys with a nail in the lever and they are scary. Imagine setting the saw down with it still winding down with the guard up, or making the cut and then resting it against your thigh. Not a pretty picture. The problem is that most of the time if you use the guard, you are always expecting it to be there and it is way too easy to forget you have it pinned up. A table saw is different in that many times the cut being made is not a complete cut, as in a rabbit, dado or groove, and the blade is always in the same place, it doesn't move. An exposed blade that moves around is a little more dangerous. If you use spinning steel you are at risk and to pin up a guard is just asking for trouble. Better to learn the tool within the limits of its design and not take the chance of a bite.