Please stop by - we can talk. I'll explain how I use the AirTach handpieces on the new machine. Once gain - they operate entirely different than the original AT handpieces.
I bought mine as quick as I could. It's already on my bench and working. This is entirely new technology - not a rehash of the old AT Machine. The feel, the touch, the control: it's all there. The handpieces are unlike anything you've seen or felt before. I have no idea what's inside the...
I've spent the past ten years or so concentrating on Colt engraving...it was time for a refreshing break. During the 2016 FEGA Show I was visiting friends and looking over tables when I came across a beautiful 1873 Winchester....this one made in 1891. Bruce Farman (Bremerton, Washington) had...
I just completed the companion guns that go with the Single Action Army shown in an earlier Thread...and also seen in Issue 139 of The Engraver Magazine. These are consecutive numbered Government Model Colt .38 Supers - one dedicated to Pancho Villa, and the other to Emiliano Zapata...The...
Ben Lane Jr. passed away this week. Ben was an outstanding engraver and a Founding Member of FEGA.
We remember Ben for his wisdom and leadership throughout the formative years of FEGA. He was a Texan, a gentleman, and a FEGA and Colt Master with an easily identifiable kind of work based on...
The Gangsters have been underway for some time and the work is nearing completion. These 1911's were obtained from the Colt Custom Shop a number of years ago; I had them stored away waiting for the right job. They are consecutive serial numbers and built in the original 1911 configuration...
Most of the scroll and inlay work was done with a pneumatic tool - specifically the GRS 901 and Monarch hand pieces and the G8 GraverMax. The detail in the bison portrait and other small gold inlay area is done by hand with a burin or bulno pick.
Thanks....I spent many years in the jewelry store engraving letters on trophies, rings, watches, pendants and other jewelry accessories, so I learned about lettering early in my career.
It's the most fun, I think, anyone can have hand engraving...designing, cutting and embellishing letters...
No, the engraver of the original is unknown. However, the gun was engraved at Colt during the Helfrich years - re: the Helfrich School. Cuno was the shop Master and he looked over and approved all engraving work. We would like to think that he was the engraver, but as we study the process...