basiecally
Member
I have a few solenoids that are small enough. Also tattoo machines have a stroke that dig a needle into the skin the stroke is a bit long. A unit that has a limiter as to the stroke should solve that problem, this may help in the present hand pieces. Air is just too mushy. A simple marking tool has been shone to have too much power and stroke. A unit one tenth the size should fit in the typical hand piece. Patents are useless. One can only enforce a patent if You have lawyers up the ying yang. As with justice, You can have all the justice You can afford. Invent, Build ,Enjoy, let the others try to decide Who owns it. I know I will not make a lot of money at building tools for engravers, nor do need or have to. When the SHTF I have that covered, then guess Who is on top?
I Think it's not a big deal if air is too "mushy". It's also springy and I Think that's kind of what you need. The flow resistance in a hydraulic system would require a lot of energy and to achieve the same impact velocity for the piston you would need a very large conductive tubing, as not to blow anything up... Correct me if I'm wrong but hydraulics are excellent when you need big forces, high precision and static load bearing capacity. For higher speed applications air is preferrable. That is if you need to change the direction of the flow. For turbines, fluid works fine of course but that wouldn't really Count as hydraulic though.
Maybe a turbine with a rotary pump on it? Provide the oscillating air pillar right in the hand piece?