I was looking at Harvey this morning. They do look nice do you like yours
I very much like mine. I debated the SawStop as it is a very good saw, but use my BS ( Harvey C-14) more and more, almost always use a jig or sled so I consider the riving knife to be the 90% safety fix. My Ridgid did not have one and it scared me several times. I also really liked the Powermatic ( always dreamed of one) but the price over the Harvey was too much. I liked some of the features of the Laguna F3 saw, but the top distance from front to blade was really short.
They don't make a premade phenolic zero clearance inserts for the my Harvey, but the Powermatic one fits, just needing a mod to the slot. Harvey wants too much for theirs. You can always DIY. I made a few small mods to the fence lock to make it smoother and put end stops on the rails. Added a Wixie digital fence scale and I never use it. I think it will come off and sell and I will make a rail with multiple adjustable stops for repeat cuts. The only other thing I would change is to convert the T fence to an L. That would give me almost 6 inches more width. Mine is the old 27 inch top standard. As I had an iron 27 inch router wing, I wanted to stick with 27. But then, when I re-did my shop, my router is back on the left side behind the saw so it would not have mattered.
Of course, older Unisaws are a kind of benchmark and they can be retrofitted with a riving knife.
I will not use a saw without one.
The pivot trunnion saws, Harvey included, run multiple V-belts. First, Chinese belts are crap though you can replace them, but they always will take a set. The higher end saws now run the multi-rib belts which are smoother running and do not take as much of a set. The higher end "dovetail" trunnion saws have an advantage of the center of the blade not moving so you can mark the center. Makes setting height easier. Not a big deal.
Harvey sells direct. No dealers. Might talk to them and see if they will deal.
Buy the tool you want, and swallow the price. This is my third table saw, so two were wasted money. Third band saw, same. Second planer and it is a compromise, but I doubt I will buy the Powermatic I want. Should have kept my first Delta miter saw ( Hate my Ridgid) but I am happy with my 6 inch Jointer. No room for a bigger one anyway. Thought I was being clever buying a older Delta drill press. Total waste of money. Should have bought the Palmgren or Jet. If you have a table top, you want a job-site. If you have a job site, you want a hybrid. If you get a hybrid, you find you wanted the cabinet saw all along. In simple terms, the cheapest tool is the right tool. It also may be just be, but I feel more confident and safer on the bigger and heavier the tool. A trust factor that any mistake is me, not the tool.
I would go for A 3 hp, 220 SAW. 2hp is not much of an upgrade. My 1 3/4 Ridgid did everything I wanted, but only with a thin kerf blade. I prefer to stick with full kerf for smoother cuts and I can use the blade guard as it is full kerf. Funny, no one seems to offer a thin kerf blade guard.
You are welcome to come see how mine works. Washington does seem like a long haul.