There is evidence for the prehistorical use of circular saws by people of
Indus Valley Civilization during the
Bronze Age. The same was excavated from the archeological site of
Lothal, Gujarat. The modern-day circular saw was invented around the end of the 18th century as a
rip-saw to convert logs into
lumber in sawmills, and various claims have been made as to who invented it. Before the design was invented, logs were sawn by hand using a
pit saw or using powered saws in a sawmill using an
up-and-down saw with a
reciprocating motion. The rotary nature of the circular saw requires more power to operate but cuts faster because the teeth are in constant motion. The sound of the circular saw is different from the sound of an up-and-down saw and earned it the nickname
buzz-saw. Sawmills first used smaller diameter circular saws to resaw dimension lumber such as
lath and
wall studs and for
edging boards. As the technology advanced large diameter saw blades began to be used for the
head saws and to cut
clapboards. Claims to the invention of the circular saw include: • A common claim is for a little-known sailmaker named Samuel Miller of
Southampton, England, who obtained a patent in 1777 for a saw windmill. However, the specification for this only mentions the form of the saw incidentally, indicating that it was probably not his invention. • Gervinus of Germany is often credited with inventing the circular saw in 1780. •
Walter Taylor of Southampton had the
blockmaking contract for
Portsmouth Dockyard. In about 1762, he built a
saw mill where he roughed out the blocks. This was replaced by another mill in 1781. Descriptions of his machinery there in the 1790s show that he had circular saws. Taylor
patented two other improvements to blockmaking but not the circular saw. This suggests either that he did not invent it or that he published his invention without patenting it (which would mean it was no longer patentable). • Another claim is that it originated in the Netherlands in the sixteenth or seventeenth century. • The use of a large circular saw in a saw mill is said to have been invented in 1813 by
Tabitha Babbitt, a
Shaker inventor, after she noted, while using her spinning wheel, the inefficiency of the traditional
saw pits used by the sawyers in her community and sought an improvement. This claim is now mostly discredited. • It is also said that
Joseph Whitaker, Naturalist amassed the circular saw and had it manufactured in the Barringer, Manners and Wallis factory in Rock Valley,
Mansfield,
Nottinghamshire. ==Process==