Hi - If the miter or bevel (depends on how you use your saw) is always 90deg then I suggest you gang the lengths and have more then one saw, Does each batch have different angles and lengths? Plus you need to consider what is called Takt time. ie do you want to do 480 pieces in one day or 1 hour? You will need to develop a few strategies and analyse them. Plus does this need to be scalable? Tomorrow you may need 480 per day but next year you need 3x that then you need an entirely different set up. So the machine needs to be scalable or easy to twin or triple.... and is it to be tended by one person or 2? or unattended full automated? You need to spend a good amount of time formulating the entire problem so the solution chosen is a good one....Peter
https://www.sawinery.net/miter-saw/bevel-vs-miter-cut/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takt_time
My observation of the machine in the video is that it will be no faster then a bright person and a mitre saw. The person on a saw will be faster. You still have to have someone load and unload and this is the root issue...
I also see that your parts are stacked in a bench. This means they have to be restacked for transport, this is wasted effort (at your cost) They need to be stacked on a pallet the first time off the cut to minimise motion. Every part motion should be one step closer to delivery vs storage or stacking or parking in some way. Often these production issues are not the cutting process, the cutting time will be the same if the machine does it or a person does it. The wasted time is in transport, set ups, poor process layout, parked product, mismatch between processes, operator overload due to prior mentioned issues requiring part caches or WIP or parking....Think the whole thing through before you do anything...cheers