Last week I received a call from Dave Riccardo, engraver who knows I live close to the NRA museum. His call was about an old power assist engraving tool driven by an electric motor which was to be donated. This engraving tool is before GRS, Ngraver, Lindsay and En-Set. I surprised Dave also as I was familiar with this machine. Years back I found an article in Gun Digest dated 1960 by John Murphy the inventor of this machine. Mr. Murphy was a dental technician by day and engraved part-time for himself and took no commissions. From the article in Mr. Murphy's own words “Gun engraving is perhaps 25% mechanical technique and 75% artistry and the power tool merely simplifies the mechanical end of the job. It still requires an artistic hand to guide itâ€.
I made a telephone call to the museum and requested an invite so I could see it before it went on exhibit. Yesterday, a fellow engraver Jim Lowe and I met with Doug Wickland the Curator to see the machine, and take pictures before it is actually placed on exhibition. Eventually the exhibit will have practice plates and an actual gun engraved by Mr. Murphy on display. Here are a few pictures:
I made a telephone call to the museum and requested an invite so I could see it before it went on exhibit. Yesterday, a fellow engraver Jim Lowe and I met with Doug Wickland the Curator to see the machine, and take pictures before it is actually placed on exhibition. Eventually the exhibit will have practice plates and an actual gun engraved by Mr. Murphy on display. Here are a few pictures: