About 10 years ago I bought a Taiwan made Jewler's Pantograph. It is a diamond scribe model and I modified it to hold barrels for engraving my Name, chamber, and neck size. It worked much better than my stamp and stamp letters. What I was doing is not even required by law. The local BATF inspector got on to a couple of type 7 FFLs in my area for using similar machines to mark their barrels. Making a long story shorter, Butch Lambert put me in touch with a lady in New York who had a New Hermes GTU engraver with some extras. This engraver is a motorized engraver. I contacted New Hermes and bought a couple of drive belts and the salesman sent me some parts catalogues and a Instruction manual. I did some research and ordered some carbide engraving bits. I set the machine up and began practicing on some old barrels. It have been a learning curve with several variables. I have had some great successes and few dismal failures. But there is light at the end of the tunnel. The BATF wants engraving to be at least 1/6" and .003" deep. I have found that I can engrave from .001" to about .010" with 1/8" letters with the best looking lettering about .003"-.007". I have found it is better to polish the barrel before engraving and polish after engraving then bead blasting. Another gunsmith up the road from me bought a small CNC mill with a 4th axis. He is using his laptop computer to run his code. He has about $5,000.00 invested. I have about $2,500.00 invested. It will be interesting to see if I end up going the CNC route due to other uses for the machine.
Nat Lambeth
Nat Lambeth