Safety nuts gone nuts again.
All of those bone saw derived tools that I have examined come with an on-off switch, not a trigger switch.
Which I don't see as a hazard because they won't cut flesh unless they are equipped with a knife blade. The saw teeth just oscillate rapidly about a mm or so.
A trigger switch would be very tiring, because they don't cut real fast. It's easy to load up the teeth or burn them if you don't rock the blade to distribute the work. ... which again would be made more difficult by having to maintain pressure on a trigger.
Making a nice straight cut as shown in the demo requires a very steady hand, and a lot more practice than I've been able to get so far.
I have not tried to cut a winding or anything similar. It's certainly worth a try in private, but I'd expect some difficulty cutting magnet wire mid-span because the saw teeth _may_ just grab the wires and wiggle them back and forth instead of cutting chips. Cutting close to the laminations would keep the wires from moving much, but you'd need a super-fine tooth blade, and those don't work real well with copper because they clog easily and copper is sticky.
You might be better off with air-assisted diagonal cutters, with a trigger valve of course.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA