I don't recalling seeing this, but it's kinda cool. Like Sam, I haven't seen Kornbrath work that looked like this, but I sent a message to Hendrik Freuhauf who is quite knowledgable on old work of Kornbrath, Fugger, etc. Winston might also know if Roger or Hendrik don't recognize it.
The problem with the B&L appears to be its squarish shape which might prevent normal ring light attachment designed to mount on round scopes. There has to be a solution though. You might contact B&L and see what they recommend. You could always machine a short tube that would thread into the...
Everyone posts photos routinely. Once you get that sorted out you'll get some comments. Without pics I'm afraid you're not going to get as much feedback as you could.
I've tried swimming pool acid and a number of things. Lapping with something that will cut ceramic is probably the best option. This is what I despise about ceramic laps. They get impregnated with metal, glaze over, and lose much of their usefulness considering what they cost. I rarely use mine...
Make a connection with the Hand Engravers Association of Great Britain. Certainly someone there can assist you with instruction and/or demonstrations of various equipment.
So far all of the clone engraving systems I have seen are very poor. You will be well advised to avoid them and seek out...
I would finish with 1000 or 1200 paper to debur the work, then do the shading and hopefully not have to debur it again. I wouldn't worry about trying to replicate Rolex's polished or brushed finishes. I would do what l think makes the engraving look its best.
Drawing on paper and then vectorizing is messy, but it might be just fine if you can tolerate the mess and get a decent transfer for engraving. Drawing in Procreate and exporting as Andrew said will produce a very clean output which can be vectorized with a much cleaner result.
The only time I...
I don't know of a heavier piston but the 901 normally comes with a light and heavy spring. The heavier one of course will provide more impact, and the lighter one works well for finer work.
Consider the Magnum if you really need a lot of power. I have one and it lives in the bottom drawer of my...
I prefer a 105 for micro lettering. I also make custom flat gravers out of knife gravers and shape the bottom to the size I need for the lettering at hand. Keep the heels very short on both the 105 and the flat. Aside from that there's not much to it that you wouldn't do with larger Roman...